You are reading tafsir of 4 ayahs: 73:1 to 73:4.
Literally ‘recite the Quran in slow, measured rhythmic tones’. This means ‘recite, paying full attention to the import of the content’. When recited like this, a two-way process between Quran and its reciter comes into play. For him, the Quran is an address or speech by God and his heart starts answering this address at every verse. In the Quran where there is any mention of God’s majesty, the reciter’s entire existence is strongly affected by the realisation of His greatness. When God’s blessings are enumerated in the Quran, the reciter’s heart overflows with gratitude; when God’s retribution is described in the Quran, the reciter trembles on reading it; when an order is laid down in the Quran, the feeling becomes intensified in the reciter that he should become the obedient subject of his Lord by carrying out that order
QUL supports exporting tafsir content in both JSON and SQLite formats.
Tafsir text may include <html>
tags for formatting such as <b>
,
<i>
, etc.
Note:
Tafsir content may span multiple ayahs. QUL exports both the tafsir text and the ayahs it applies to.
Example JSON Format:
{ "2:3": { "text": "tafisr text.", "ayah_keys": ["2:3", "2:4"] }, "2:4": "2:3" }
"ayah_key"
in "surah:ayah"
, e.g. "2:3"
means
3rd ayah of Surah Al-Baqarah.
text
: the tafsir content (can include HTML)ayah_keys
: an array of ayah keys this tafsir applies toayah_key
where the tafsir text can be found.
ayah_key
: the ayah for which this record applies.group_ayah_key
: the ayah key that contains the main tafsir text (used for shared tafsir).
from_ayah
/ to_ayah
: start and end ayah keys for convenience (optional).ayah_keys
: comma-separated list of all ayah keys that this tafsir covers.text
: tafsir text. If blank, use the text
from the group_ayah_key
.