The illiteracy of the greatest Messenger In light of heritage and modernity
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.36324/fqhj.v1i43.15688Keywords:
the Prophet’s illiteracyAbstract
The problem of the Prophet’s illiteracy stands as a stumbling block in front of the Muslim mind, and because this problem is mainly attracted by two parties, the first party says that he was illiterate before and after the mission. The orientalists who claim that the Messenger knows how to read and write, and these had their motives, the most important of which is the marketing of the accusation that the Messenger learned the fundamentals of monotheism and some of the laws from the books of the two Testaments, and trying to formulate them in a new Arab template under the name of Islam.
The owners of the first trend are trying to defend the Messenger and claim that he is illiterate in order not to say that he has read translations of previous sacred books. The mission and then became known to read and write.
The research dismissed these accusations with a set of transmissible and mental evidence that would clear the Messenger of God from such an accusation.
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