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[One Ummah] - The Qur'an Describes Blood Circulation

One Ummah Network
Sat, 11 Nov 2000 19:57:14 -0800

Submission by:  Muslim Writers Society <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Topic:               The Qur'an Describes Blood Circulation

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Text:  

Assalaamu 'alaikum,

The Muslim Writers Society has added two new articles and several poems to
its web site.  To read all of them, point your browsers to:
http://www.oneummah.net/qalam/  To have your articles, poems, stories, etc.
published on the web site, send them to [EMAIL PROTECTED]  Below is
one of our latest articles courtesy of brother Mohammad Shafi J. Aga: 
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In the Name of God, the Gracious, the Merciful

IT WAS THE QURAAN THAT FIRST REVEALED THE FACT OF BLOOD CIRCULATION IN
HUMAN BODY

In Sura 96, Verse 2 (Q: 96.2), the Quraan says, "Khuliqal insaana min alaq"
which means, "(Allah) created a human being from `alaq'". The accepted
meaning of `alaq' is that initial embryonic stage, when it is in the form
of a leech-like clot of blood clinging to or suspended from the wall of the
uterus. At this stage, although there is a rudimentary formation of the
human cardiovascular (blood circulatory) system, the heart has not started
beating and the embryo has not yet acquired distinct human characteristics.


2. In a later-revealed Sura (Sura #86), however, the Quraan speaks of
another ingredient or raw material, other than `alaq', which has gone into
the making of `insaan'. Verses 5 to 8 of this Sura run as follows:
"Falyanzuril insaanu minma khuliq. Khuliqa minmaain daafiq. Yakhruju
minbainis sulbi wattaraaib. Innahu alaa raj'eihi laqadir." [`Insaan' should
then consider by what (means) he/she has been created. He/she has been
created by (means of) gushing fluid. Which (fluid) comes out from between
the spine and the ribs. Verily it is indeed capable of being returned.] 

3. I am aware that the translation I have given in the above paragraph is
not the orthodox one. But then, as anybody can see, the orthodox
translation has deviated from the plain meaning of the words used in the
Quraan to suit the translators' own ideas about the message, the verses are
conveying.

4. The preconceived idea of the translators is that the gushing fluid,
referred to in the above-quoted verses of Sura #86, is semen that spurts
out of the male organ, penis, during the sexual act. But with this
preconceived idea, the translators had a problem. Semen, obviously, does
not gush out from between the backbone and the ribs; nor, for that matter,
is it produced there. Then, is the Word of Allah, na'auzubilLah, wrong? NO,
explain the translators, the semen-producing organs are originally
embedded, in the foetus, between the backbone and the ribs, but they
gradually descend, until birth of the child, to their position, at birth,
between the legs.

5. Even an adolescent can say that the translators' above explanation is
nothing but stretching of their imaginations in a vain bid to justify their
interpretation of the Divine Verses. [There are other explanations given,
which are equally un-convincing.] Such justifications cannot but cast
doubts on the veracity of the Quraan being the Word of Allah. And Allah
says of the Quraan: "Zalikal kitabu la raiba feehi" (This is the book
wherein there is no doubt) [Q: 2.2]!

6. The Quraan itself says that the meanings of some of the verses may not
be clear to mankind initially for some period of time because of the limits
of its (mankind's) knowledge. But, "soon will We show them Our Signs in the
regions, and in their own souls, until it becomes manifest to them that
this (Quraan) is the Truth" [Q: 41.53]. It is therefore imperative for true
believers to stick to the plain meaning of Quraanic Verses and refrain from
devious interpretations, even when the plain meaning is not understandable.
The expanding sphere of human knowledge may make the meaning clear at some
future point of time.

7. The plain meaning of the Verses under consideration [Q: 86.5 to 7] is
that Allah created `insaan' by means of the fluid that gushes out from the
cavity enclosed by the back on one side and the ribs on the other. At the
time, in the seventh century A.D., when these Verses were revealed, people
could not understand the full implication of the Verses. The level of their
knowledge about the intricacies of the human body was too low. They could
not then understand as to what fluid could gush out of the said cavity. It
was only ten centuries later, when the English physician, William Harvey*,
announced his discovery of blood circulating around the body in a closed
circuit, that mankind became aware of blood gushing out of the heart
located in the cavity formed by the ribs and the backbone. Now we know how
the pumping action of the heart makes the blood gush out into the aorta. So
now we know what fluid it is that gushes out from the exact place described
in the Quraan. The fluid is nothing but blood. Why, then, do we, the people
of the modern age, not accept this simple truth? Why do we still insist
that the fluid is semen, when deep down in our hearts, we know that semen
does not spurt out from the spot in the human body, so exactly described in
the said Verses?

8. After the creation of the first man and woman by Allah, semen of course
is the source derived from man for the creation of Adam and Eve's
succeeding progeny. But semen is not the only source. The other source is
the female egg. Neither of these two sources, however, can be said to be
the ready-to-use materials from which `insaan' is created. After
fertilization, the two sources together have to undergo numerous changes
till the formation in the uterus of what Allah calls `alaq'. Now this
`alaq' is the ready-to-use material with which `insaan' is created as
stated by Allah Himself [Q: 96.2 cited above].

9. With the tremendous advances made in human knowledge during the last 13
centuries since the revelation of the Quraan, we now know that `alaq' or
the leech-shaped embryo in the mother's womb has the rudimentary
(undeveloped) forms of the heart and the network of blood vessels. The
rudimentary heart and blood-vessel-network is even filled with blood (the
tiny embryo's own distinctive blood and not the mother's), but there is no
heartbeat and no consequent circulation of the blood. `Alaq' is thus merely
the source from which a human being is to be created, but it is not an
`insaan' yet. Except for the cardio-vascular system, no other organ system
has reached a functional state therein. In fact, there is not even a
rudimentary formation of any other distinctly human organ at this stage.

10. The Quraan (Q: 96.2) says, I repeat, that `alaq' is the material from
which `insaan' is created. But `alaq' is not `insaan'; it is only a raw
material for the latter. Something else, other than `alaq', is therefore
logically required for the creation of `insaan'. It is my humble submission
that the Verses (Q: 86.5 to 8) provide a clue to the other thing required.
This other thing cannot be semen for the obvious reason that semen has
already gone into the making of `alaq'. 
11. As explained in para 7 above, the gushing fluid referred to in Verses
(Q: 86.5 to 8) could only be blood. One may, however, ask, how could blood
be the thing, other than `alaq', from which a living `insaan' is created,
when blood might be part of `alaq' itself? Yes, it is not blood, per se,
which is the other thing required, but it is the gushing fluid (blood),
together with the motive force behind it, which is required to convert
`alaq' into a living thing, `insaan'.

12. When blood stops gushing out of the heart, life ceases to exist. As a
necessary corollary to this statement of fact, one has to admit that life
begins when the heart in the embryo starts ticking and blood starts gushing
out therefrom at the beginning of the 4th week after conception. It is with
this gushing blood that primitive organs are formed and the embryo takes
distinctly human shape by the end of the 8th week. Without this gushing
blood, the embryo would not develop into the infant, capable of coming out
into the world and continuing to live therein. Even after birth, the
creating and developing work of the gushing blood continues till the infant
turns into a fully developed `insaan'. It is this gushing blood which
sustains every cell of the body by regularly supplying oxygen and
nourishment to it and draining out wastes therefrom. Without this gushing
blood, the cells would all be dead, life would cease to exist, and there
would be no `insaan'.

13. In the light of the above discussion, is there any doubt now that along
with `alaq', it is the blood gushing out of the heart by means of which
`insaan' has been created and sustained? Is there any doubt now that the
gushing fluid referred to in the Verses, (Q: 86.5 & 6) is not semen but
blood gushing out of the heart? Is there any doubt now that the said Verses
had revealed a scientific truth in the seventh century, when the truth
dawned on the scientific world only over a thousand years later? Is there
any doubt now that the Quraan is the book of Allah? Only those will have
doubts who are "deaf, dumb, blind and therefore do not understand" (Q:
2.171).

14. The Verse, (Q: 86.8), is generally so translated as to mean that Allah
is capable of resurrecting `insaan' on the day of judgement, after his
death in this world. The crucial word in the Verse is `raj'eihi'. `Raj'ei',
of course, means return. But what does `hi', meaning `his/its' pertain to -
to `insaan' or to `gushing fluid' both referred to in the preceding Verses?
In the traditional translation, of course, `hi' has been taken to mean
`his' and is construed to pertain to `insaan', occurring in the earlier
Verse #5. But the interpretation of Verse #8, thus made, appears to be
rather contrived. This `contrivance' was naturally to be expected from
interpreters/translators at the time of the revelation of the Verses, and
for centuries later, because of the limitation of human knowledge about the
intricacies of the human body, at that time. If the Verse were to be then
interpreted to mean that the gushing fluid was capable of being returned to
where it originated from, it would make no sense to the people living then.
But now, this interpretation would not only make sense, but would be a
natural corollary to the interpretation given to the immediately preceding
Verses above, in this write-up.

15. Look at the implication of this interpretation: The Holy Quraan had
revealed the fact of blood circulation in the human body, long back in the
seventh century, whereas the world of science came to know of it about a
thousand years later! * 
16. But, alas, most of humanity would persist in being "summunm, bukmun,
umyun, fahum la yaqiloon" (Q: 2.171)! 

*Note: It has come to my knowledge, after I first wrote the above piece,
that blood circulation was first discovered, not by William Harvey, but by
a Muslim, Ibn Nafees, in the twelfth century AD itself. But, even then, the
fact remains that blood circulation was first revealed, earlier, in the
Quraan. 

By Mohammad Shafi J. Aga, 
6, Crystal, near Post Office, 
Malavni Municipal Colony, 
Mumbai - 400 095, INDIA. 
Phone: (0091 22) 8897792. 
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

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