Ten qirââah belongs to the ten Imams of Qurâanic recitaters. It composes seven Imams who are remarkably recognized in Muslim traditions mainly introduced by Ibn Mujâhid (245- 324 H), with three additional Imams, Abû Jaâfar al-Qaâqââ, Abû Yaâqûb al-Haá¸ramî, and Khalaf bin Hishâm. Different from seven qirââah that is officially approved (mutawâtir) by most of Muslim scholars, the existence of ten qirââah is still debatable. Indeed, some of scholars classify it as poor qirââah (shâdh). Five centuries later after Ibn Mujâhidâs introduction on seven qirââah, al-Jazarî (d. 833 H) argues some evidences on the validity of chain transmission (sanad) of the last three Imams. In the hand of al-Jazarî, the ten qirââah is attested to be completely meeting a requirements of qirââah such like, reliable chainâs transmission, compatible to rasm âUthmânî, and convenient to Arabic rules. Therefore, there is no reason to leave and refuse the last three Imams (ten qirââah) in the Islamic tradition of Qurâanic recitation.
Copyrights © 2015