Sūrata’l-Baqarah ( "the Cow") is the second, and the longest, chapter of the Qur'an, with 286 verses.
It is a Madinan sura; most of it was revealed during the first two years after the Hijra, but some sections (for instance, the verses prohibiting interest on loans) were revealed later, and the last three verses had been revealed in Makka. It addresses a wide variety of topics, including substantial amounts of law, and retells stories of Adam and Moses and Abraham. A major theme is guidance: urging the pagans and Jews of Madina to become Muslim, and warning them and the hypocrites of the fate God had visited in the past on those who failed to heed his call.
It appears to be one of the earliest suras (with an-Nisa and some others) to be mentioned by name in a non-Muslim written source. John of Damascus (~730s) speaks of "the text of the Cow", and the Syriac Disputations of a Monk of Beth Hale and an Arab Notable (date hard to determine, but apparently post-710) has the monk saying "I think that for you, too, not all your laws and commandments are in the Qur'an which Muhammad taught you; rather there are some which he taught you from the Qur'an, and some are in surat albaqrah and in gygy (Injil?) and in twrh (Torah.)"
Surat Al-Baqarah contains several verses dealing with the subject of warfare. Verses are often quoted on the nature of battle in Islam.
However, with the coming of the Prophet Mohammed the Quran states that those who do not believe in his message are infidels and therefore not saved from Hell.
The Sura's name is in reference to an argument between the Prophet Moses and the Israelites over a cow they should sacrifice in order to know the murderer of a slain man.From the Muslim perspective, the story is told to demonstrate that such idle argument is the wrong way to react to a direct commandment from God (Arabic Allah), as opposed to direct submission mandated by Islam.
An incidence occurred prior to these verses being revealed. A man named Al-Akhnas ibn Shuriq came to the Muhammad to embrace Islam, but as he turned to leave, he happened to pass by a pasture and grazing animals. He set it alight and killed the cattle. This verses express disapproval http://www.yanabi.com/forum/messageview.cfm?catid=80&threadid=2324&enterthread=y.According to the well-known medieval tafsir of Ibn Kathir (who bases his statement on a hadith of Abul-Aliyah), ayat 190–1 were the first ayat regarding fighting revealed in Madina, and "ever since it was revealed, Allah's Messenger used to fight only those who fought him and avoid non-combatants." It mentions the minority opinion of Abd-al-Rahman ibn Zayd ibn Aslam that this verse was abrogated by "then kill the mushriks (polytheists) wherever you find them", but rejects this view as implausible. Ibn Kathir explains the "limits" that it says should not be transgressed as referring to "mutilating the dead, theft (from the captured goods), killing women, children and old people who do not participate in warfare, killing priests and residents of houses of worship, burning down trees and killing animals without real benefit", citing Ibn Abbas, Hasan al-Basri, Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz, and others in support. He interprets fitna (literally "disorder"; translated here "tumult or oppression") as referring to aggression against Muslims or polytheism (shirk). The "prohibited months" refers to the four "holy months" during which battle is normally forbidden, Dhu al-Qi'dah, Dhul Hijjah, Muharram, and Rajab (see Islamic calendar.)
This is a important verses, termed the Throne Verse, ayat ul-kursi, and widely memorized and displayed in the Islamic world:A hadith calls this "the greatest verse in the Book of Allah", and another says "It is never recited in a house but Ash-Shaytan leaves." *
This verse notes that "there is no compulsion in religion."
سورة البقرة | Surat Al Baqarah | Beqere | Soera De Koe | Сура Корова | Bakara Suresi
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It uses material from the
"Al-Baqara".
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