Israeli Web site advises using wisdom of Quran

foqia khan

MPA (400+ posts)
HAIFA, Israel (CNN) -- A new Web site launched by an Israeli university professor and his Bedouin students aims to address life's everyday quandaries from the perspective of an ancient sacred text: the Quran.

An Israeli professor and his students have launched a Web site to promote the teachings of the Quran.

Organizers of the site, Quranet.net, say they hope it will serve as a "bridge between Islam and the West" by applying the wisdom of Islam's holiest book to modern-day problems.

"We try to transform the Quran into a modern and useful tool, so that every person can find a Quranic answer to modern psychological and educational queries," said Ofer Grosbard, professor at the Academic Arab College for Education, affiliated with Haifa University.

Quranet divides chapters of the Quran into topics such as "Loss, Illness and Tragedy," and provides answers to such questions as, "Is loss an excuse for aggression?" and "What can we say to someone who refuses to accept a gesture of peace?"

The questions are answered with a relevant Quranic verse, followed by an educational-psychological explanation of the issue.

Quranet seeks to illustrate "the beauty of the Quran," said Grosbard, who believes the book's positive messages have been overshadowed by Islamic fundamentalists who've manipulated the text as a justification for terrorism.

The professor came up with the idea for Quranet while teaching a class on developmental psychology to Bedouin graduate students.

He was approached one day after class by Bushra Mazarib, a young Bedouin woman.

"Do you want me to tell you the truth?" she told Grosbard. "Nothing of what you are teaching me will help when a parent may come to me and say, 'The devil has gotten into my son.' "

Western thought and psychological explanations do not speak to a Bedouin Arab's everyday problems, explained Mazarib. The only way to address the issues facing Bedouins -- nomadic Arabs from the deserts of North Africa -- lies in the Quran, she said.

Mazarib plans to work with Bedouin parents as a school counselor. She believes the words of the Quran hold the key to addressing every question those parents may have.

"I want to explain something to parents in a language that they will understand. They don't understand psychology, they only understand the Quran," she tells CNN. "We believe [the Quran] is from God and you cannot question it."

Grosbard was taken with the simplicity of Mazarib's challenge. Soon, he doled out a new assignment: Each of his Bedouin students was to extrapolate the most educational and inspirational verses from the Quran and come up with a short story exemplifying their practicality.

His students were up for the task, returning to class with hundreds of stories from the Quran "that only a Bedouin knows how to tell," Grosbard said.

Storytelling is an intrinsic part of Bedouin culture. Bedouin Arabs, scattered throughout the Negev and Sinai deserts, make up a largely agrarian community.

Some Bedouins, such as Mazarib, live in modern luxury, but the majority live in the same type of rudimentary tents that their ancestors lived in hundreds of years ago.

Before television took over some of homes, extended Bedouin families would sit in the Den, or Diwan, exchanging stories for hours. Grosbard used his students' material to create the Quranet site and its companion book, "Quranet: A Guide for Education."

He hopes Quranet will provide practical advice to help the Muslim community deal with such issues and problems as adolescence, grief, incest, infidelity, violence and tolerance.

Quranet has received praise from prominent sheiks, who wrote a foreword to the book, and the Israeli government, which endorses the project on its Foreign Ministry Web site.

Some Arab media, however, urge Muslims to be wary of an "Israeli Web site" that interprets the Quran to serve the "political agenda" of Israel. Politics aside, the idea of Jewish scholars interpreting or translating Islamic texts is nothing new, said Professor Akbar Ahmed, chair of Islamic Studies at the American University in Washington, D.C.

"Anything that furthers understanding, furthers bridge- building, furthers interfaith friendship is to be encouraged," said Ahmed, who believes some in the Muslim world are bound to be skeptical given the delicate nature of interpreting holy texts.

"If this project has been handled with sensitivity, then Muslims need to look at it on its merit," he said. "Before judging we need to give it a chance."

So far, Quranet is a fledgling site, with no search function or interactive features. It's also written mostly in English, with some passages in Arabic and Hebrew.

Grosbard is seeking funding to expand the site and envisions future Quranet versions in Arabic, Hebrew, Turkish and Persian.

Grosbard hopes the site also will someday have voice-enhanced capability for live chats with illiterate Web users.

As the Internet becomes more readily available in homes worldwide, Mazarib and Grosbard agree the future of Quranet is infinite. "After all," Grosbard said, "there are over 1.5 billion Muslims in the world."


http://edition.cnn.com/2008/TECH/12/05/ ... index.html
 

foqia khan

MPA (400+ posts)
Goethe said it centuries ago.
"However often we turn to it [the Qur'an], at first disgusting us each time afresh, it soon attracts, astounds, and in the end enforces our reverence... Its style, in accordance with its contents and aim, is stern, grand, terrible - ever and anon truly sublime. Thus this book will go on exercising through all ages a most potent influence. "
(Goethe,quoted in T P Hughes' Dictionary of Islam, p 526. )
_________________
 

gazoomartian

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)
foqia khan said:
Israeli Web site advises using wisdom of Quran
HAIFA, Israel (CNN) -- A new Web site launched by an Israeli university professor and his Bedouin students aims to address life's everyday quandaries from the perspective of an ancient sacred text: the Quran.

for details:
http://edition.cnn.com/2008/TECH/12/05/ ... index.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

its been blocked, it says: site can not be opened. May be blocked by tel aviv
 

hassam

MPA (400+ posts)
I hope this is for good. Most of us are not conversant in Quran and that is the cause of our issues. I hope this website does not turn out to be another fitna and it helps the humanity to understand the wisdom of Quran. The most revered Saint of Chiristianity who has wirtten the new Testament, Paul was a Jew before he calimed that he was approached by Jessus and he asked him to preach christianity. He made the use of Pork OK to Christians on the premise that Jesus told him that "I have come to make pure to you what was not pure for Jews".

So be careful.
 

gazoomartian

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)
foqia khan said:
HAIFA, Israel (CNN) -- A new Web site launched by an Israeli university professor and his Bedouin students aims to address life's everyday quandaries from the perspective of an ancient sacred text: the Quran.

An Israeli professor and his students have launched a Web site to promote the teachings of the Quran.

Organizers of the site, Quranet.net, say they hope it will serve as a "bridge between Islam and the West" by applying the wisdom of Islam's holiest book to modern-day problems.

"We try to transform the Quran into a modern and useful tool, so that every person can find a Quranic answer to modern psychological and educational queries," said Ofer Grosbard, professor at the Academic Arab College for Education, affiliated with Haifa University.

Quranet divides chapters of the Quran into topics such as "Loss, Illness and Tragedy," and provides answers to such questions as, "Is loss an excuse for aggression?" and "What can we say to someone who refuses to accept a gesture of peace?"

The questions are answered with a relevant Quranic verse, followed by an educational-psychological explanation of the issue.

Quranet seeks to illustrate "the beauty of the Quran," said Grosbard, who believes the book's positive messages have been overshadowed by Islamic fundamentalists who've manipulated the text as a justification for terrorism.

The professor came up with the idea for Quranet while teaching a class on developmental psychology to Bedouin graduate students.

He was approached one day after class by Bushra Mazarib, a young Bedouin woman.

"Do you want me to tell you the truth?" she told Grosbard. "Nothing of what you are teaching me will help when a parent may come to me and say, 'The devil has gotten into my son.' "

Western thought and psychological explanations do not speak to a Bedouin Arab's everyday problems, explained Mazarib. The only way to address the issues facing Bedouins -- nomadic Arabs from the deserts of North Africa -- lies in the Quran, she said.

Mazarib plans to work with Bedouin parents as a school counselor. She believes the words of the Quran hold the key to addressing every question those parents may have.

"I want to explain something to parents in a language that they will understand. They don't understand psychology, they only understand the Quran," she tells CNN. "We believe [the Quran] is from God and you cannot question it."

Grosbard was taken with the simplicity of Mazarib's challenge. Soon, he doled out a new assignment: Each of his Bedouin students was to extrapolate the most educational and inspirational verses from the Quran and come up with a short story exemplifying their practicality.

His students were up for the task, returning to class with hundreds of stories from the Quran "that only a Bedouin knows how to tell," Grosbard said.

Storytelling is an intrinsic part of Bedouin culture. Bedouin Arabs, scattered throughout the Negev and Sinai deserts, make up a largely agrarian community.

Some Bedouins, such as Mazarib, live in modern luxury, but the majority live in the same type of rudimentary tents that their ancestors lived in hundreds of years ago.

Before television took over some of homes, extended Bedouin families would sit in the Den, or Diwan, exchanging stories for hours. Grosbard used his students' material to create the Quranet site and its companion book, "Quranet: A Guide for Education."

He hopes Quranet will provide practical advice to help the Muslim community deal with such issues and problems as adolescence, grief, incest, infidelity, violence and tolerance.

Quranet has received praise from prominent sheiks, who wrote a foreword to the book, and the Israeli government, which endorses the project on its Foreign Ministry Web site.

Some Arab media, however, urge Muslims to be wary of an "Israeli Web site" that interprets the Quran to serve the "political agenda" of Israel. Politics aside, the idea of Jewish scholars interpreting or translating Islamic texts is nothing new, said Professor Akbar Ahmed, chair of Islamic Studies at the American University in Washington, D.C.

"Anything that furthers understanding, furthers bridge- building, furthers interfaith friendship is to be encouraged," said Ahmed, who believes some in the Muslim world are bound to be skeptical given the delicate nature of interpreting holy texts.

"If this project has been handled with sensitivity, then Muslims need to look at it on its merit," he said. "Before judging we need to give it a chance."

So far, Quranet is a fledgling site, with no search function or interactive features. It's also written mostly in English, with some passages in Arabic and Hebrew.

Grosbard is seeking funding to expand the site and envisions future Quranet versions in Arabic, Hebrew, Turkish and Persian.

Grosbard hopes the site also will someday have voice-enhanced capability for live chats with illiterate Web users.

As the Internet becomes more readily available in homes worldwide, Mazarib and Grosbard agree the future of Quranet is infinite. "After all," Grosbard said, "there are over 1.5 billion Muslims in the world."


http://edition.cnn.com/2008/TECH/12/05/ ... index.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;


i wasnt still open it but read the text here.

i just hope they are not attempting to modify it

added: but its His book. He has to and will protect it. Like He said: Aur hum ney yeh kitab nazil ki hai (aur) him (hi) iski hifazat kareingey
 

Saladin A

Minister (2k+ posts)
We offered our trust to the heavens, to the earth, and to the mountains, but they refused the burden, and were afraid to receive it. Man undertook to bear it, but he has proved a sinner and a fool. Allah will surely punish the hypocrites and the unbelievers, both men and women, but pardon believing men and believing women, Allah is Forgiving and Merciful. (33:72-33)

The Quran states that Allah is love, for He is Knowledge and Light, Justice and Majesty as well as Peace and Beauty but He is never without love and His love is essential to all His creation of the universe and those reside in it and our relation with him. Everything in the universe, from tiny ants to vast galaxies adhere to a single definite course and judging from the way all things are faithful to the pattern laid down for them. Only man remains in ignorance of his course-an unaware creature adrift in all-knowing cosmos. He sees his ultimate destination, yet he is doubtful. It was who made the heaven and the earth, and sends water from sky with which He brings forth fruits for your sustenance. He drives the ships which, by His leave, sail the ocean in your service. He has created rivers for your benefit, and the sun and the moon, which, steadfastly pursue their courses. And, He has subdued for you the night and the day. He grants you all that you ask of Him. If you reckoned up Allahs favours, you could not count them. Truly man is wicked and thankless. (14.32-34)

The Quran is regarded as a literary masterpiece and respected by both the Muslims and non-Muslims and its place in classics of world literature is well established and beyong criticism. In his translation of the Quran, Marmaduke Pickthall described it as that inimitable symphony, the very sound of which moves man into tears and ecstasy, and the German poet, Goethe had said: However often we turn to it, it first sounds terse, it soon attracts, astounds, and in the end enforces our reverence. Its style is truly sublime, stern, grand and magical and that is the essence of this book.

The other reason responsible for the popularity of the Qur'an among the people was its extraordinary, supernatural literary and artistic dimension depicted in its rhetoric and eloquence. It was this strong literary attraction towards the Qur'an, which had an appeal for the people, that prompted them to immediately memorize its verses. But unlike Bible which has been exposed to meddling by the Christians who think they are improving on the original but nobody could ever give himself the permission of meddling with the sacred text the Quran. The Quran immediately declared in one of its verses: Had he [the Prophet (SAW)] invented against Us any sayings, We would have seized him by the right hand, then We would surely have cut his life ven. (69:44-46) There are several other ayats in the Quran that forbid forgery in relation to the Word of Allah.

I hope and wish that this website helps and guides the Jews as much as it would help Christians, Hindus and other non-Muslims of world. The study and knowledge of the Quran is essential for every learned person as well as for all faithful believers. It is specially essential for those scholars who are interested in the study of man and society, since this book has been effectively instrumental not only in moulding the destinies of Islamic societies but also in shaping the destiny of the human race as a whole. if you were study the history of the world with ambience mind, it should be enough to provide sufficient proof that there has been no such book that has ever influenced human societies to the magnitude of the Quran. I have no hesitation to say that Islam civilized the world when it lived in the dark ages, and especially the European lived in caves without wearing clothes and eating raw meat.

The Quran revealed to Prophet Mohammed (SAW) over 1400 years ago is not a textbook of science, it is however a highly scientific book and makes numerous references to natural phenomena including movements of heavenly bodies, birth of a child from the very moment of if its conception, behaviour of different creatures and is backed by modern science that has astounded many modern scientists. The Quran has specified those aspects of the Universal system which prove the need for the divine guidance on this earth. We have before us a grand and impeccable universe; not only that it visibly exist but it is also in perpetual motion; it functions with clockwork regularity not a second hither thither and is free of all imperfections. All meaningful activities are taking place within it and all its components parts are coordinated with total precision of the most immaculate engineering skills and faculty. In spite of the incredible vastness it occupies beneath and above us, it shows absolute perfection in system of functioning. Allahs splendid creativity is at work all the time and what we see is only the rainbow.

As in the Quran Allah says : "O Mankind! Reverence your Guardian- Lord Who created you from a single person; created, of like nature, his mate, from them twain scattered countless men and Women". ( An-Nisa 4:1) "It is He Who has created you for all things that are on earth; moreover His design comprehended the heavens, for He gave order and perfection to the seven firmaments; and of all things He has perfrct knowledge." (Al Baqarah 2.29)Surah Al-alaq ayat 2 : Created man out of a (mere) clot of congealed blood.". It describes embryo formation at the earliest stage resembling a clot of blood.