Intro
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I'm going to show you a miracle you probably have
never noticed before:
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the divine arrangement of verses in the Quran.
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It's such a clear and obvious miracle that all you
need is to see it with your eyes.
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Millions of people have read and memorized the
Quran,
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but for centuries, no one noticed these hidden
visual patterns
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in these three copies.
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Today, we will show how the Quran is a miracle,
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not just in its message, but also in its pages,
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its lines, its words, and even in its letters.
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Have you ever seen a book where across dozens of
pages,
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every line starts with the same letter?
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In this Mushaf (a physical copy of the Quran),
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every line begins with the same letter.
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Just think about it.
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Every page has the same number of lines, every line
is the same length,
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and every one of them starts with that same letter.
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Or, in this copy of the Quran, there's a
symmetrical pattern
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that appears on every page.
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The first and last lines begin with the same
letter.
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The second line and the second to last line also
start with the same letter.
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The third from the top
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and the third from the bottom, the same again.
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Every single line follows this rule,
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and we see the same miracle repeating on every
page.
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Now, this copy you are seeing might be the most
interesting of them all.
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Today, we are going to have a fascinating visual
journey
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that will increase your iman (faith) to a whole new
level.
Hafiz Osman
Nuri
1:24
Hafiz Osman Nuri was a calligrapher who lived in
the late 1800s
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and wrote the entire Quran by hand 106 times.
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Yes, 106 times.
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But the greatest legacy he left behind
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was not just the Mushafs he wrote.
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It was the writing style and page structure that
are now accepted across the world.
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One day, while copying the Quran once again,
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he asked himself a question: "What is the best
way to write the Quran?"
What is the
best way to write the Quran?
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At that time, he had no idea that he was about to
discover a miracle.
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Some time later, Allah inspired his heart with an
idea.
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He was going to write a Mushaf using the Quran's
own measurements.
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To determine the length of each line, he used the
shortest Surah (chapter),
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Surah al-Kauthar (Chapter of Abundance),
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as the reference and decided to make every line the
same length as that Surah.
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For the length of a page, he chose the longest Ayah
(verse),
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Ayah al-Mudayana (the Verse of Debt).
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So every page would be the length of that Ayah
(verse), which filled an entire page.
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But when he started writing,
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he couldn't believe how perfectly the verses fell
into place.
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He was amazed by what he saw.
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Every page started with a complete verse and ended
with the conclusion of another.
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No verse was ever split between pages.
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Each one ended exactly at the bottom of the page.
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And the entire Quran continued in this way, 600
pages.
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Isn't it strange that Allah placed the key to
writing it perfectly
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right inside the Quran itself?
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Everyone who saw it was amazed,
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and soon, this writing style began to spread across
the Islamic world.
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Now, imagine this.
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We gather every book ever written and upload all of
them into a computer.
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Then we ask AI to rewrite each one,
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but using the shortest paragraph as the standard
for a line
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and the longest paragraph as the size of a page.
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Do you think even one of those books
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could match the perfect layout of the Quran?
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I really don't think so.
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This proves once again that the Quran is the word
of Allah.
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Because its structure is so precise,
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it would be impossible for a human to design it
intentionally.
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On top of that, Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon
him) was unlettered;
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he was not able to read or write.
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And what's even more interesting is this:
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the verses and Surahs (chapters) of the Quran
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were revealed over a period of 23 years,
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in response to different events,
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and always at specific moments, not all at once.
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What's even more surprising is that
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the order in which the Surahs were revealed
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is completely different from the order
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Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) taught his
companions.
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So, if he couldn't have planned this structure
himself,
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and we've never seen anything like it in any other
book,
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then it's very clear: this is a miracle.
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Afterwards, the great Tafsir (Quranic exegesis)
scholar Bediuzzaman
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discovered more hidden secrets in the same copy in
1932.
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He noticed that keywords like the names Allah, Rabb
(Lord/Master),
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Rahman (Most Merciful), and the names of prophets,
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along with other important terms,
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aligned in ways that couldn't possibly be random.
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Some appeared one below the other on the same page,
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just like beads on a fiber.
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Some aligned perfectly on top of each other
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when you bring two facing pages together.
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Others matched perfectly on both sides of the page.
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So, he wanted to have a Quran written in a way
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that would clearly highlight these alignments.
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And what emerged was the divine alignment of the
Quran.
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Shall we take a closer look?
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Let's go to page 35.
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Look at how the word Rabb (Lord/Master), meaning
master that refers to Allah,
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lines up perfectly, five times in a row.
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Now let's move on to pages 62 and 63.
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Look at the placement of the word Allah nine times
on page 62.
The writing
of the name Allah with tawafuq
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What an amazing pattern.
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And on the opposite page, it happens again.
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All nine of them perfectly placed one below the
other.
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As we keep flipping the pages,
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we will keep seeing this vertical alignment,
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the divine alignment,
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all throughout the Quran.
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Let's go to page 259.
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Look at how the word Rabb appears,
The writing
of the name Rabb with tawafuq
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placed one on top of the other on the same page,
nine times in total.
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Something very interesting is waiting for us on
pages 82 and 83.
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Look at how the word Allah is repeated four times
on both sides
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and how perfectly they match across the facing
pages.
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Isn't that incredible?
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Another kind of the divine alignment
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appears between the front and back of a single
sheet of the Quran.
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Let's take a look at the sheet that contains pages
33 and 34.
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On the sheet that includes pages 289 and 290,
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the word Quran aligns perfectly back-to-back, as
you can see.
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There are many more examples like this.
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I'm just showing a few.
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Now, you are about to see something completely
unexpected.
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Page 422.
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Let me take you to the page where the name Allah
appears more than anywhere else.
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On this page, the word Allah appears 15 times in
perfect alignment.
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Out of all 604 pages of the Quran,
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this one contains the highest number of the word
Allah.
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And do you know which Ayah (verse) begins on the
third line from the bottom?
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Yā ayyuhalladhīna āmānū dhkurullāha dhikran
kathīran.
6:28
"O you who have believed, remember Allah with
much remembrance."
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So, while Allah commands us to remember Him often,
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He mentions His name more than any other page,
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and displays a visual miracle through the divine
alignment.
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According to Bediuzzaman, who discovered this
miracle,
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the word Allah appears 2,806 times in the Quran.
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And in nearly all of them, we see divine alignment.
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Also, the word Rabb (Lord/Master) appears 846
times,
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the name Rahim (Most Merciful) 220 times,
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and the name Rahman (Most Merciful) 156 times.
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And in many of them, we see the same kind of divine
alignment again.
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Another set of words that align like this are the
names of prophets.
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For example, on page 327,
The names
of Sulayman (Solomon)
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we see the names of Sulayman (Solomon) and Dawud
(David) (peace be upon them).
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Wa Sulayman (and Solomon), Sulayman, wa Sulayman.
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By the way, "wa" means in the Arabic
"and".
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And also Dawud, and Dawud.
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As you can see, the names are lined up one below
the other.
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On page 449,
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we see the names of prophets Ishaq (Isaac),
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Musa (Moses), and Harun (Aaron) (peace be upon
them).
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As you can see, Musa, Musa, Harun, and Harun,
Ishaq, and Ishaq.
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As you can see, each of them are mentioned twice,
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and all three names appear vertically arranged.
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On page 19, the name Ibrahim (Abraham) (peace be
upon him)
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appears three times in a row, perfectly aligned.
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As you can see: Ibrahim, Ibrahim, and again,
Ibrahim.
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On page 235, the name Yusuf (Joseph) appears four
times.
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And of course, again, one below the other.
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As you see, all four align perfectly.
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Yusuf, Yusuf, Yusuf, and again, Yusuf.
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If I ask you one of Yusuf's (PBUH) most well-known
qualities,
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what would you say? His beauty, right?
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That's one of the qualities we mention the most.
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Let's go to page 235.
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You see the word Yusuf on the sixth line.
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Now, let's turn the page and see which word it
lines up with on the back.
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As you can see, it says "Jameel," meaning
beautiful.
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Isn't that strange?
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We are talking about a book that was revealed over
23 years
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in response to different events.
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Sometimes it was revealed as a direct answer
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to a question or a situation.
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So, if someone were to claim that, God forbid, the
Prophet designed this,
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he wouldn't even have had the time to plan it.
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Just read about his life, and you'll understand
what I mean.
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Sometimes the verses were revealed in response to
people's exact words
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or to specific incidents.
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Just think, if that person hadn't said that
sentence
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or hadn't said it in that exact way,
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the entire structure we've been showing would fall
apart.
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A person can choose what he says,
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but he cannot control what someone else says,
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and he definitely cannot control what events he
will go through.
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The only possible explanation is this:
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These are the words of Allah,
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whose knowledge surrounds everything: past,
present, and future.
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Let's go back to the last example.
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The words Yusuf and Jameel, which means beautiful.
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So, besides the divine alignment we've seen so far
in the Quran,
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there's also this special kind of alignment.
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Now, let's go to a different type of alignment that
will amaze you again.
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Have you ever heard the famous dog of Ashab al-Kahf
(People of the Cave)?
The dog of
Ashab al-Kahf (Qitmir)
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Its name was Qitmir.
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Let's go to the page where their story is told:
page 294.
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At the end of the seventh line, it says, "wa
kalbuhum,"
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which means, "and their dog."
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What was the name of this dog? Qitmir, right?
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Now, let's start flipping through the pages.
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How far do we go?
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One page, two, 10, 20...
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Exactly 141 pages forward.
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And what do we find at the beginning of the seventh
line? Qitmir.
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One word was at the end of the seventh line,
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and the other at the beginning.
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But if you look at the Quran while it's closed,
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these two words, despite being over a hundred pages
apart,
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align perfectly on the same horizontal line.
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Now, think about it.
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If even one of the events described over those 140
pages had happened differently,
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or if they were told in another way, if the
sentence structures had changed,
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if those parts were left out, or if other things
were told instead,
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this alignment would be lost.
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Out of countless possibilities, this is the version
that came to be.
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A book full of deep meanings and, at the same time,
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filled with hundreds of divine alignments. It's
beyond comprehension.
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Now, do you see why no one can produce an
equivalent of the Quran?
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Of course, this is not the main reason,
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but even this one unique feature could never be
matched.
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Let's go back to Ashab al-Kahf (People of the Cave)
and page 294.
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When they finally woke up from their famous sleep,
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they tried to figure out how long they had been
there.
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In the 11th line, one of them said, "Labithna
yawman aw ba'da yawm,"
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"We have stayed a day or part of a day."
While they were trying to figure it out,
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look at the same line on the opposite page.
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It's as if Allah is answering them directly.
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"Wa labithu fi kahfihim thalatha mi'ati sinina
wazdadu tis'a,"
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"They remained in their cave for 300 years and
they added nine more."
11:17
Another kind of these visual miracles is when two
verses with similar meanings
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appear in alignment, even though dozens of pages
lie between them.
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For example, at the beginning of page 342, we read,
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"Wa anzala minas sama'i ma'am bi qadar,"
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"And We've sent down rain from the sky in a
measured amount."
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Exactly 147 pages later, at the start of page 489,
it says,
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"Walladhi nazzala minas sama'i ma'am bi
qadar,"
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"And who sends down rain from the sky in
measured amounts."
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As you see, they have almost the same meaning,
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and they align perfectly on the top of the page.
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And again, if you look at the fourth line on both
page 71 and 511,
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you will see sentences that are almost identical,
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starting at the exact same spot.
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In the Name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Most
Merciful.
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"Yaquluna bi afwahihim ma laysa fi
qulubihim,"
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And on the other, "Yaquluna bi alsinatihim ma
laysa fi qulubihim,"
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"Saying with their tongues what was not in
their hearts."
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Despite the 440 pages in between.
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We notice the same pattern again when we compare
pages 112 and 286.
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On the fourth line from the bottom, we read,
"Wabtaghu ilayhil wasilah,"
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"...and seek the means of nearness to
Him."
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Now look at the other page.
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"Yabtaghuna ila rabbihimul wasilah,"
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"They seek means of nearness to their
Lord."
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Now pages 219 and 415.
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On the third lines of both pages,
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the verses begin with nearly the same words.
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"Walaw sha'a rabbuka la'amana man fil ardi
kulluhum jami'a,"
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"And had your Lord willed, those on earth
would have believed."
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The verses on the third lines of both pages have
nearly the same meaning.
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"Walaw shi'na la'atayna kulla nafsin
hudaha,"
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"And if We had willed, We could have given
every soul its guidance."
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Just like these verses say, Allah does not need
people to believe.
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In fact, we are the ones who need belief.
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If He had willed, He could have expected belief
from us
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without giving a single clear proof.
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Yet, He still shows us countless signs just like
these,
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so that we might believe and save our eternal
lives.
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The copy of the Quran we've been talking about
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is actually one of three major divinely aligned
Qurans.
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As I mentioned earlier, there are two more, each
with their own uniqueness.
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But because they haven't been studied in detail
like this one,
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we still don't know what other wonders they
contain,
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or how many more divinely aligned Qurans
13:43
might still be out there waiting to be discovered.
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Let's take a quick look at how one of them was
written.
Hafiz
Hunsari
13:48
Another scholar from the Ottoman era, Hafiz
Hunsari.
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He once saw the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon
him) in his dream.
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Until that time, he also had been writing the Quran
by hand.
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In the dream, he told the Prophet Muhammad (peace
be upon him) about his work
14:00
and asked for a kind of spiritual gift.
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The Prophet ﷺ accepted this request and showed him how the Quran
14:06
could be written in a different way.
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Following his instructions, he wrote every page
with exactly 11 lines,
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and the result was amazing.
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The first letters of the lines on each page follow
a perfect pattern.
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For example, the first line begins with the letter
Fa,
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and the last line also begins with the same letter,
Fa.
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The second line starts with Alif,
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and the second line from the bottom also starts
with Alif.
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The third line and the third from the bottom,
again, same: Lam, Lam.
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The fourth line also begins with Lam,
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and the fourth from the bottom begins with Lam as
well.
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The fifth line starts with Alif,
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and so does the fifth line from the bottom, Alif.
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This symmetry continues throughout the entire
Quran,
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page after page, line after line.
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No matter which page you go to, you will see the
same symmetrical pattern.
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The third divinely-aligned copy of the Quran
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comes to us from Lahore, Pakistan.
14:56
It's known as Quran Majeed Alfi.
14:58
It took 12 years to complete, and during that time,
Qur’an
Majeed Alfi
15:01
the scholar who wrote it fasted continuously.
15:04
Each page has 21 lines, and as you can see, every
line starts with the letter Alif.
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No matter which page you go to, it's the same.
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The entire Mushaf (physical copy) contains 221
pages.
15:15
Just like the Mushaf written in Hafiz Hunsari's
style,
15:18
the unique design of this Mushaf cannot be found in
any other book.
15:22
And as you see, Allah made His word compatible
15:24
with all three of these incredible visual
structures,
15:27
leaving no room for doubt.
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But what if I told you this is not all?
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Now I'm going to show you a miracle that takes this
visual beauty
15:36
to a whole new level.
15:37
Even the number of repetitions of certain words in
the Quran reveals a miracle.
15:41
For example, the word "yawm", meaning
"day," appears exactly 365 times,
15:47
clearly pointing to the number of days in a year.
15:50
The word "shahr", meaning
"month," appears exactly 12 times,
15:53
just like the number of months in a year.
15:55
The word "malak", meaning
"angel,"
15:57
and its opposite "shaytan", meaning
"the devil,"
15:59
both appear 88 times.
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By the way, you can verify this with AI.
16:03
The numbers are exactly the same.
16:05
Jannah (paradise), and Jahannam (hell), both appear
77 times.
16:10
"Rajul" (man), and "imra'a"
(woman), each appear 24 times.
16:14
Another example: The Quran says,
The names
of Jesus and Adam (pbut)
16:16
"Indeed, the example of Jesus in the sight of
Allah is like that of Adam."
16:20
This verse refers to the fact that both were
created without a father,
16:24
unlike other human beings.
16:26
Interestingly, both names, Jesus and Adam, appear
24 times throughout the Quran.
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They are mentioned an equal number of times.
16:34
Now, let me give you a completely different kind of
example.
The longest Surah, Surah al-Baqarah (Chapter of the
Cow), has 286 verses.
Throughout this Surah, the word Allah appears 282
times.
In addition, the pronoun "huwa", meaning
"he," referring to Allah,
ppears four times.
Add them together, and you get a perfect match:
286,
just as the number of verses in this Surah.
Surah
an-Nisa, Surah al-Maidah, Surah an-Anam and the word Allah
Or take the Surahs, Surah An-Nisa (Chapter of the
Women),
Al-Ma'idah (The Table Spread), and Surah Al-An'am
(The Cattle).
The total number of verses across these three is
464.
And guess what?
The name Allah appears exactly 464 times in these
three Surahs.
Now let's look at an even more surprising pattern.
17:14
Take the following five Surahs: Surah al-Baqarah
(Chapter of the Cow),
17:17
Ali 'Imran (Family of Imran), An-Nisa (The Women),
Al-Ma'idah (The Table Spread),
17:20
and Al-An'am (The Cattle), from chapter 2 to 6.
17:22
The number of times the name Allah appears in this
group
17:26
is exactly double the amount found in the next five
Surahs:
17:30
Al-A'raf (The Heights), Al-Anfal (The Spoils of
War),
17:31
At-Tawbah (The Repentance), Yunus (Jonah), and Hud.
17:33
And again, it continues.
17:35
That second group is also exactly double that of
the next five:
17:39
Yusuf (Joseph), Ra'd (Thunder), Ibrahim (Abraham),
17:41
Al-Hijr (The Rocky Tract), and An-Nahl (The Bee).
17:42
These were revealed in different contexts, for
different purposes.
17:46
Yet, miraculously, they show this pattern.
17:49
And these are just the ones we know about.
17:51
Who knows how many other verses might carry similar
patterns.
17:55
Finally, we have to remember this fact.
17:57
It's simply impossible for any human being to have
arranged all these intentionally.
Even the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ never used this as a proof himself.
If he had arranged it, surely he would have mentioned it.
But these were discovered centuries later.
And besides all this, the content of the Quran is unlike any other book.
It gives us a strong system of belief,
tells stories of prophets filled with wisdom,
teaches us how to view events of life with a deeper perspective,
and speaks about the afterlife, paradise and hell, reward and punishment.
Sometimes it explores the depths of history;
other times, it speaks of events yet to come.
It solves philosophical problems no thinker has ever resolved.
It teaches how to be an ideal parent, gives golden principles for business,
offers insights related to the medical field,
and displays unmatched excellence in eloquence and literature.
It gives powerful advice in law, addresses matters of science,
and shares valuable lessons in education and sociology.
And that's still not the full list.
At most, a person can specialize in just one or two of these areas,
but the Quran covers all of them and delivers its message
with a structure full of miraculous symmetry.
In its lines, there's mathematics.
In its verses, there's wisdom.
In its sentences, there's art.
In its verses, there's knowledge.
And in its message, there is eternity.
This is a divine book that came down from the heavens,
19:24
guiding every aspect of life.
19:26
So, for a generation that says, "I won't
believe unless I see it with my own eyes,"
19:31
isn't this a miracle clear enough?