وَالنَّجْمِ إِذَا هَوَىٰ
CONSIDER this unfolding [of God's message], as it comes down from on high! (1)
مَا ضَلَّ صَاحِبُكُمْ وَمَا غَوَىٰ
This fellow-man of yours has not gone astray, nor is he deluded, (2)
وَمَا يَنْطِقُ عَنِ الْهَوَىٰ
and neither does he speak out of his own desire: (3)
إِنْ هُوَ إِلَّا وَحْيٌ يُوحَىٰ
that [which he conveys to you] is but [a divine] inspiration with which he is being inspired – (4)
عَلَّمَهُ شَدِيدُ الْقُوَىٰ
something that a very mighty one has imparted to him: (5)
ذُو مِرَّةٍ فَاسْتَوَىٰ
[an angel] endowed with surpassing power, who in time manifested himself in his true shape and nature, (6)
وَهُوَ بِالْأُفُقِ الْأَعْلَىٰ
appearing in the horizon's loftiest part, (7)
ثُمَّ دَنَا فَتَدَلَّىٰ
and then drew near, and came close, (8)
فَكَانَ قَابَ قَوْسَيْنِ أَوْ أَدْنَىٰ
until he was but two bow-lengths away, or even nearer. (9)
فَأَوْحَىٰ إِلَىٰ عَبْدِهِ مَا أَوْحَىٰ
And thus did [God] reveal unto His servant whatever He deemed right to reveal. (10)
مَا كَذَبَ الْفُؤَادُ مَا رَأَىٰ
The [servant's] heart did not give the lie to what he saw: (11)
أَفَتُمَارُونَهُ عَلَىٰ مَا يَرَىٰ
will you, then, contend with him as to what he saw? (12)
وَلَقَدْ رَآهُ نَزْلَةً أُخْرَىٰ
And, indeed, he saw it descend a second time (13)
عِنْدَ سِدْرَةِ الْمُنْتَهَىٰ
by the lote-tree of the farthest limit, (14)
عِنْدَهَا جَنَّةُ الْمَأْوَىٰ
near unto the garden of promise, (15)
إِذْ يَغْشَى السِّدْرَةَ مَا يَغْشَىٰ
with the lote-tree veiled in a veil of nameless splendour.... (16)
مَا زَاغَ الْبَصَرُ وَمَا طَغَىٰ
[And withal,] the eye did not waver, nor yet did it stray: (17)
لَقَدْ رَأَىٰ مِنْ آيَاتِ رَبِّهِ الْكُبْرَىٰ
truly did he see some of the most profound of his Sustainer's symbols. (18)
أَفَرَأَيْتُمُ اللَّاتَ وَالْعُزَّىٰ
HAVE YOU, then, ever considered [what you are worshipping in] Al-Lāt and Al-'Uzzā, (19)
وَمَنَاةَ الثَّالِثَةَ الْأُخْرَىٰ
as well as [in] Manāt, the third and last [of this triad]? (20)
أَلَكُمُ الذَّكَرُ وَلَهُ الْأُنْثَىٰ
Why – for yourselves [you would choose only] male offspring, whereas to Him [you assign] female: (21)
تِلْكَ إِذًا قِسْمَةٌ ضِيزَىٰ
that, lo and behold, is an unfair division! (22)
إِنْ هِيَ إِلَّا أَسْمَاءٌ سَمَّيْتُمُوهَا أَنْتُمْ وَآبَاؤُكُمْ مَا أَنْزَلَ اللَّهُ بِهَا مِنْ سُلْطَانٍ إِنْ يَتَّبِعُونَ إِلَّا الظَّنَّ وَمَا تَهْوَى الْأَنْفُسُ وَلَقَدْ جَاءَهُمْ مِنْ رَبِّهِمُ الْهُدَىٰ
These [allegedly divine beings] are nothing but empty names which you have invented – you and your forefathers – [and] for which God has bestowed no warrant from on high. They [who worship them] follow nothing but surmise and their own wishful thinking – although right guidance has now indeed come unto them from their Sustainer. (23)
أَمْ لِلْإِنْسَانِ مَا تَمَنَّىٰ
Does man imagine that it is his due to have all that he might wish for, (24)
فَلِلَّهِ الْآخِرَةُ وَالْأُولَىٰ
despite the fact that [both] the life to come and this present [one] belong to God [alone]? (25)
- as well as [in] Manat, the third and last [of this triad]?13
- 13 After pointing out that the Prophet was granted true insight into some of the most profound verities, the Qur'an draws our attention to the "false symbols" which men so often choose to invest with divine qualities or powers: in this instance by way of example - to the blasphemous imagery of the Prophet's pagan contemporaries epitomized in the triad of Al-Lat, Manat and Al-'Uzza, These three goddesses - regarded by the pagan Arabs as "God's daughters" side by side with the angels (who, too, were conceived of as females) - were worshipped in most of pre-Islamic Arabia, and had several shrines in the Hijaz and in Najd. The worship of Al-Lat was particularly ancient and almost certainly of South-Arabian origin; she may have been the prototype of the Greek semi-goddess Leto, one of the wives of Zeus and mother of Apollo and Artemis.
-
And another, the third (goddess), Manat?
— Abdullah Yusuf Ali -
And Manat, the third, the other?
— Marmaduke Pickthall -
And Manat, the third, the last?
— M. Habib Shakir -
And Manat (another idol of the pagan Arabs), the other third?
— Taqiuddin Hilali and M. Mohsin Khan -
And Manat the other third?
— Abdul-Majid Daryabadi -
and, another, the third manat?
— Hasan Qaribullah and Ahmed Darwish -
and Manat the third, the other?
— Ayub Khan -
And Manat, the third one, another goddess.
— Sher Ali -
as well as [in] Manāt, the third and last [of this triad]?
— Muhammad Asad -
and Manat the third, the other?
— Arthur Arberry -
and about the third deity, al-Manat?
— Abu'l Ala Maududi