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CyberWell Israel Resah dengan  Tagar "Saya Penyintas Holocaust Gaza” "Sejarah tidak pernah mati. Ia hanya mengganti wa...




CyberWell Israel Resah dengan 
Tagar "Saya Penyintas Holocaust Gaza”

"Sejarah tidak pernah mati. Ia hanya mengganti wajahnya, mengganti medianya, mengganti siapa yang menjadi korban dan siapa yang menulisnya."


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Lidah Luka yang Menciptakan Kata Baru

Di zaman ini, manusia tidak lagi menulis sejarah dengan pena, tetapi dengan tagar. Dan di antara jutaan kata yang melintas di dunia digital pasca-pengeboman Gaza, lahirlah sebuah frasa yang mengguncang kesadaran moral dunia:
“Saya selamat dari Holocaust Gaza.”

Kata itu menyebar bukan dari ruang akademik, bukan dari dokumen sejarah, tetapi dari reruntuhan rumah, dari jari-jari anak muda Gaza yang masih berdebu, dari wajah perempuan yang kehilangan seluruh keluarganya.
Mereka bukan sejarawan. Mereka saksi hidup.
Dan dunia mulai mendengar.

Organisasi CyberWell, sebuah lembaga pemantau antisemitisme daring di Israel, menyebut tren ini sebagai “eksploitasi sinis terhadap memori Holocaust.” Mereka memperingatkan bahwa istilah seperti “Gaza Holocaust survivor” atau “I am the real Holocaust survivor” adalah bentuk distorsi sejarah yang berbahaya — karena, kata mereka, menyamakan penderitaan warga Gaza dengan Holocaust berarti merendahkan tragedi Yahudi di Eropa.

Namun dunia lain membaca berbeda.
Mereka melihat bukan penyangkalan, tetapi pembalikan cermin moral: bahwa kejahatan yang dulu menimpa kaum Yahudi kini sedang diulang oleh negara yang didirikan atas nama penderitaan itu sendiri.


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Ketika Ingatan Bertabrakan

Sejak gencatan senjata diumumkan, CyberWell melaporkan lonjakan 42 persen unggahan di X (Twitter) yang menggunakan istilah “Gaza Holocaust.”
Lebih dari 525.000 unggahan, menjangkau lebih dari 500 juta pengguna di seluruh dunia.
Ada video remaja yang menatap kamera dengan mata merah dan berkata pelan,

“Saya penyintas Holocaust Gaza.”

Ada juga yang menulis di bawah foto reruntuhan:

“Kalian dulu berkata: ‘Never again.’ Tapi lihatlah — it happens again.”

Dan tiba-tiba, ruang digital berubah menjadi gelanggang perang memori:

Israel menuduh dunia menyamakan korban dengan pelaku.

Dunia menuduh Israel mengkhianati makna kemanusiaan yang pernah menebus mereka dari sejarah.

Media Israel seperti Ynet dan Times of Israel menulis bahwa istilah “Holocaust Gaza” adalah bentuk antisemitisme baru.
Namun di sisi lain, media seperti Al Jazeera, Middle East Eye, The Guardian, Le Monde, bahkan Haaretz sendiri — memuat opini yang lebih gelap:

“Ketika Israel mengebom kamp pengungsi, menutup air dan listrik, memblokir bantuan kemanusiaan — bukankah dunia sedang menyaksikan bentuk lain dari dehumanisasi yang dulu disebut Holocaust?”


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Dua Dunia yang Tidak Lagi Bicara dengan Bahasa yang Sama

Israel berbicara dengan bahasa trauma masa lalu.
Gaza berbicara dengan bahasa luka masa kini.

Yang satu berkata, “Kami korban sejarah.”
Yang lain menjawab, “Kami korban dari korban sejarah.”

Dunia pun terbelah antara dua moralitas:
Moralitas yang mengingat masa lalu — dan moralitas yang menolak menutup mata hari ini.

Bagi Israel, menyamakan penderitaan Gaza dengan Holocaust adalah dosa historis.
Bagi dunia, membungkam penderitaan Gaza dengan alasan Holocaust adalah dosa moral.

Di sinilah keanehan zaman digital bekerja.
Sejarah tak lagi tinggal di buku-buku, tapi di feed media sosial.
Di sana, algoritma menjadi juru tafsir.
Ia memilih mana kisah yang harus naik ke puncak trending, dan mana yang harus tenggelam di antara berita hiburan.
Dan untuk pertama kalinya, Gaza menang dalam perang naratif — karena kebenaran kini punya kamera sendiri.


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Dunia yang Menyaksikan Dua Jenis Holocaust

Ketika kata Holocaust dulu disebut, manusia terdiam.
Itu kata suci. Kata yang tak boleh disamakan dengan apapun.
Namun generasi baru tumbuh dengan citra yang berbeda.
Mereka melihat anak-anak Gaza yang terbakar, bukan di museum, tapi di timeline mereka sendiri.
Mereka melihat ibu-ibu memeluk tubuh anak yang hancur di bawah puing, bukan di film dokumenter, tapi di live stream.

Seorang pengguna X dari Jakarta menulis:

 “Kami tidak menyangkal Holocaust. Kami hanya mengatakan: manusia tidak belajar apa-apa darinya.”

Di TikTok, video bertagar #GazaHolocaust melampaui 300 juta penayangan.
Di Instagram, story dengan tulisan “Never again — for anyone” menjadi simbol solidaritas lintas bangsa.
Dan di antara itu semua, muncul ribuan komentar dari Eropa, Amerika Latin, hingga Afrika:

 “Holocaust tidak mati. Ia berpindah alamat.”


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Perlawanan dari Bahasa

Setiap kekuasaan takut pada satu hal: bahasa.
Karena ketika rakyat memberi nama pada penderitaan mereka, maka kekuasaan kehilangan kendali atas makna.

Israel berabad-abad melindungi istilah Holocaust sebagai simbol moral tertinggi: penderitaan yang tak boleh dibandingkan.
Namun kini, Gaza merebutnya — bukan untuk menandingi, tetapi untuk menuntut ruang moral yang sama.
Bahwa air mata anak-anak Palestina tidak kurang kudus daripada air mata anak-anak Eropa tahun 1945.

Inilah perang simbol yang sebenarnya:
Ketika kata-kata menjadi medan pertempuran baru, dan dunia bertarung untuk menentukan siapa yang berhak menyebut diri korban.


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Narasi yang Retak: Ketika Korban Menjadi Penindas

Hannah Arendt, filsuf Yahudi yang melarikan diri dari Nazi, pernah menulis tentang “banalitas kejahatan” — bahwa kejahatan terbesar sering dilakukan bukan oleh monster, tetapi oleh manusia biasa yang berhenti berpikir.
Kata-kata itu kini menggema dari Gaza:
tentara yang menekan tombol drone, politisi yang memerintahkan blokade, juru bicara yang menyebut 30.000 kematian sebagai “collateral damage”.

Sementara itu, Elie Wiesel — penyintas Auschwitz — dulu berkata,

“Yang berlawanan dengan cinta bukan kebencian, tetapi ketidakpedulian.”

Kini ketidakpedulian itulah yang menjadi wajah baru dunia.
Ketika foto anak Gaza muncul di feed, sebagian pengguna men-scroll dengan cepat, lalu menonton video kucing setelahnya.
Begitulah cara nurani perlahan padam — bukan karena kebencian, tapi karena kebiasaan.


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Tafsir dari Langit

Al-Qur’an mengingatkan dalam Surah Al-Baqarah ayat 85:

“Apakah kamu beriman kepada sebagian Kitab dan ingkar kepada sebagian yang lain? Maka tidak ada balasan bagi yang demikian di antara kamu melainkan kehinaan dalam kehidupan dunia...”

Ayat ini seolah berbicara pada zaman kita — pada bangsa yang dulu menuntut keadilan bagi dirinya, namun menolak memberikannya kepada bangsa lain.
Mereka yang menolak Holocaust terjadi pada dirinya, kini menolak melihat Holocaust yang sedang mereka lakukan.

Dan di titik inilah, sejarah tidak hanya berulang — ia menuntut balasan moral.
Karena Tuhan tidak pernah diam pada kezaliman, sekalipun ia dilakukan oleh mereka yang dahulu dizalimi.


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 Dunia yang Mulai Berbicara

Negara-negara di Afrika Selatan, Turki, Bolivia, dan Malaysia mulai menuduh Israel melakukan genosida.
Ratusan seniman, akademisi, dan penyintas Holocaust sendiri menulis surat terbuka:

 “Sebagai penyintas sejarah, kami menolak digunakan untuk membenarkan kejahatan baru.”

Di ruang-ruang digital, muncul barisan panjang tagar sebagai bentuk doa kolektif:

#GazaHolocaust

#IAmGazaSurvivor

#CeasefireNow

#NeverAgainForAnyone

#StopGenocideInGaza

#FreePalestine


Hashtag bukan hanya slogan; ia adalah doa modern — doa yang mengetuk nurani manusia melalui layar.


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Dunia yang Menolak Diam

Mungkin bagi sebagian, kata “Holocaust Gaza” terdengar berlebihan.
Tapi bagi yang kehilangan rumah, keluarga, dan masa depan, itu bukan metafora — itu kenyataan.
Dan bagi dunia, istilah itu menjadi peringatan:
bahwa penderitaan manusia tidak boleh dipatenkan oleh satu bangsa saja.

Seorang remaja di Rafah menulis di dinding reruntuhan dengan arang:

“Aku bukan teroris. Aku manusia yang tidak punya tempat untuk lari.”

Dan dunia menjawab dengan bahasa baru:

 “Kami mendengarmu.”


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Akhirnya, tentang Kemanusiaan yang Tersisa

Di antara semua retakan sejarah, masih ada satu kalimat yang menyatukan:
Never again — for anyone.
Bukan hanya bagi Yahudi, bukan hanya bagi Palestina, tapi bagi seluruh manusia yang pernah kehilangan hak untuk hidup.

Kini, ketika Israel berteriak bahwa dunia sedang menodai memori Holocaust, dunia menjawab dengan sunyi:

“Kami tidak menodai sejarahmu. Kami hanya menolak mengulanginya.”

“Holocaust Gaza” bukanlah fitnah — ia adalah cermin.
Cermin yang memantulkan wajah bangsa yang dulu menolak tunduk pada penindasan, namun kini berdiri di sisi penindas.
Dan di balik semua debat, satu hal tetap pasti:
bahasa penderitaan selalu menemukan jalannya,
sekalipun dunia berusaha membungkamnya.


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Penutup

Mungkin dunia akan melupakan tagar, melupakan statistik, melupakan pernyataan resmi.
Namun manusia tidak akan pernah lupa kepada satu hal:
kepada siapa sejarah berpihak ketika nurani diuji.

Dan di antara reruntuhan Gaza, kalimat itu akan terus hidup — bukan sebagai lelucon, bukan sebagai propaganda, tapi sebagai perlawanan yang lahir dari nurani yang menolak mati:

“Saya selamat dari Holocaust Gaza.”

Young Women Whose Contributions Were Immortalized in the Qur'an When discussing the great figures of the Qur'an, attenti...

Young Women Whose Contributions Were Immortalized in the Qur'an

When discussing the great figures of the Qur'an, attention is usually directed toward prophets, messengers, kings, and rulers. Yet a closer examination reveals a remarkable fact that often goes unnoticed.

Behind some of the most significant events that shaped human history, the Qur'an also highlights the contributions of several young women. They were neither prophets nor rulers. Yet their decisions, courage, wisdom, and character became integral parts of Allah's divine plan.

Who were they?

The first was the sister of Prophet Musa (Moses).

The second was Maryam bint 'Imran (Mary, daughter of Imran).

The third was one of the two young shepherd women in the land of Madyan.

They lived in different times and circumstances, but they shared one important characteristic:

When circumstances demanded action, they stepped forward and fulfilled their role.

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The First Young Woman: Moses' Sister and the Rescue Mission of an Infant Prophet

This story begins during one of the darkest periods in Egyptian history, when Pharaoh implemented a brutal policy: the killing of every newborn male among the Children of Israel.

Amid this terrifying threat, the mother of Moses received divine inspiration from Allah to place her infant son in a chest and cast it into the river.

Yet once the chest drifted away, a mother's anxiety did not disappear.

The Qur'an preserves a brief but significant command:

«"And she said to his sister, 'Follow him.'"

(Qur'an 28:11)»

The command was directed to a young girl—Moses' sister.

Thus began a dangerous surveillance mission.

She followed the chest from a distance.

She observed without attracting attention.

She remained among the crowd without arousing suspicion.

The Qur'an records:

«"So she watched him from afar while they were unaware."

(Qur'an 28:11)»

This was more than the curiosity of an older sister.

It was a carefully executed mission to safeguard her brother.

Her intelligence became even more evident when Moses arrived at Pharaoh's palace. By Allah's decree, the infant refused every woman who attempted to nurse him.

The palace became anxious.

At that crucial moment, Moses' sister stepped forward with a solution.

She said:

«"Shall I direct you to a household that will care for him for you and look after him sincerely?"

(Qur'an 28:12)»

The statement was remarkably clever.

She did not reveal that she was related to the child.

She did not expose any connection between herself and Moses.

She simply offered a practical solution to the palace's problem.

Through her wisdom, composure, and courage, Moses was ultimately returned to his own mother.

A young girl became the link between Allah's decree and the preservation of a future prophet.

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The Second Young Woman: Maryam and the Sanctuary That Changed History

If Moses' sister is remembered for strategic intelligence, Maryam bint 'Imran is remembered for her devotion, purity, and unwavering faith.

Her story began before she was even capable of understanding the world around her.

Her mother dedicated her to the service of Allah in Bayt al-Maqdis (Jerusalem).

Traditionally, such service was reserved for males, yet Allah accepted the vow.

Allah says:

«"So her Lord accepted her with a gracious acceptance and caused her to grow in a good manner."

(Qur'an 3:37)»

Maryam grew up in an environment of worship under the care of Prophet Zakariyya (Zechariah).

In the sanctuary where she devoted herself to Allah, extraordinary events occurred.

Whenever Zakariyya entered to see her, he found provisions unlike anything he expected.

Fruits appeared out of season.

Food was present without any apparent source.

When Zakariyya asked where it had come from, Maryam replied:

«"It is from Allah."

(Qur'an 3:37)»

This brief response revealed the depth of her faith.

Maryam was not known for military strength or political influence.

She was known for spiritual excellence.

Within the quiet walls of her sanctuary, Allah was preparing a woman who would one day give birth to Prophet 'Isa (Jesus), peace be upon him, and become one of the most honored women in human history.

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The Third and Fourth Young Women: The Two Shepherd Girls of Madyan

The next story unfolds after Moses fled Egypt following an incident in which he unintentionally killed a man.

After a long and exhausting journey, he arrived at a well in the land of Madyan.

There he witnessed a scene that caught his attention.

Many men were crowding around the well, drawing water for their flocks.

Yet standing apart from the crowd were two young women holding back their sheep.

Moses asked:

«"What is your situation?"

(Qur'an 28:23)»

Their answer revealed much about their family's circumstances.

They said:

«"We cannot water our flocks until the shepherds have finished, and our father is an old man."

(Qur'an 28:23)»

These young women displayed a remarkable balance between responsibility and modesty.

They worked to support their family because necessity required it.

Yet they maintained their dignity and avoided competing aggressively among the men.

Rather than pushing their way forward, they patiently waited despite the hardship.

Moved by their situation, Moses watered their flock for them.

What seemed like a simple act of kindness became the beginning of a relationship that would transform Moses' future.

One of the two young women later suggested to her father that Moses should be employed.

Her recommendation was based upon a remarkably perceptive assessment:

«"Indeed, the best person you can hire is the one who is strong and trustworthy."

(Qur'an 28:26)»

In a single sentence, she summarized two timeless qualifications for leadership and responsibility:

Competence and integrity.

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The Great Lessons from These Young Women

These stories reveal a fascinating pattern.

Moses' sister demonstrated strategic intelligence and courage.

Maryam demonstrated spiritual purity and closeness to Allah.

The two young women of Madyan demonstrated responsibility, modesty, wisdom, and the ability to judge character accurately.

They were young.

They were not rulers.

They did not command armies.

Yet the Qur'an preserves their stories because of the extraordinary qualities they embodied.

These narratives also challenge the assumption that women's contributions to history occur only on the margins of great events.

In the Qur'anic narrative, these young women stand as significant actors who helped shape the course of history.

One young woman helped save a prophet.

One young woman was prepared to become the mother of a prophet.

Two young women opened the door to the future of a prophet.

In Allah's plan, actions that appear small can become part of a much greater story—one that changes the course of human history.

Their stories remind us that greatness is not measured by titles, power, or fame.

Rather, it is measured by faithfulness to one's responsibility when the moment to act arrives.

Must One Be a Prophet to Change the World? Must a person be a prophet to call others to the truth? Must society wait for the arr...

Must One Be a Prophet to Change the World?

Must a person be a prophet to call others to the truth?

Must society wait for the arrival of a prophet before it can be reformed?

Must one possess miracles in order to change the course of history?

If the answer were "yes," then the vast majority of humanity would never have the opportunity to contribute to the cause of Allah.

Yet when we examine the Qur'an, we discover a remarkable fact.

Many of the figures immortalized by Allah were not prophets. Some even lived during periods when no prophet was present among them. Nevertheless, their influence was so profound that their stories have been preserved in the Qur'an until the Day of Judgment.

They prove that what changes history is not necessarily miracles, but faith, wisdom, courage, and the effective use of the means that Allah has placed at one's disposal.

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Dhul-Qarnayn: A Leader Who Utilized Every Means

While many people wait for help to descend from the heavens, Dhul-Qarnayn acted by making use of every capability Allah had granted him.

Allah says:

«"Indeed, We established him upon the earth, and We gave him a way to everything."

(Qur'an 18:84)»

The key word in this verse is sabab—a means, a path, an instrument.

Allah does not describe Dhul-Qarnayn as possessing miracles.

Instead, the Qur'an highlights the resources, knowledge, authority, and means that enabled him to solve society's problems.

When confronted with the threat of Gog and Magog (Ya'juj and Ma'juj), he did not wait for a supernatural intervention. He organized the people, employed the technology available to him, and constructed a massive barrier that protected them.

His story teaches that great change often begins with the ability to make use of the means already available.

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Luqman: Calling to Truth Without the Title of Prophethood

Luqman's name is preserved in the Qur'an, even though the majority of scholars hold that he was not a prophet.

What made him so extraordinary?

Allah says:

«"And We certainly gave Luqman wisdom..."

(Qur'an 31:12)»

Luqman did not rule a kingdom.

He did not command an army.

He did not bring a revealed scripture.

He simply educated his son.

Yet his advice concerning monotheism, gratitude, character, humility, and social responsibility became lessons for all generations.

Through Luqman, the Qur'an demonstrates that civilization is not always built from positions of power. Sometimes it begins within the family.

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The People of the Cave: Youth Who Refused to Follow the Crowd

What if a person lives in a society whose entire system rejects the truth?

The Qur'an answers through the story of the People of the Cave (Ashab al-Kahf).

Allah says:

«"Indeed, they were young men who believed in their Lord, and We increased them in guidance."

(Qur'an 18:13)»

They were not prophets.

They were not famous scholars.

They were simply a group of young believers who refused to submit to the idolatry imposed by their rulers.

They chose to preserve their faith even at the cost of comfort, security, and social acceptance.

In the modern world, the People of the Cave teach that maintaining one's integrity under immense social pressure is itself a powerful form of da'wah.

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The People of the Trench: When Faith Is More Precious Than Life

There was also a group of believers whose individual names are never mentioned.

They are known as the People of the Trench (Ashab al-Ukhdud).

Allah says:

«"Destroyed were the companions of the trench, the fire filled with fuel."

(Qur'an 85:4–5)»

They were not prophets.

They possessed no miracles.

They held no political power.

Yet they possessed something that no authority could purchase: unwavering faith.

They were burned alive because they refused to abandon their belief in Allah.

Militarily, they lost.

Worldly speaking, they were killed.

But historically, they triumphed.

The names of many of the rulers who persecuted them have faded from human memory, while the story of those martyrs continues to be recited by billions of people across the centuries.

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The Man Who Came Running from the Far End of the City

The Qur'an also immortalizes an unnamed man who rushed from the far side of the city to defend Allah's messengers.

Allah says:

«"And a man came running from the farthest end of the city. He said, 'O my people, follow the messengers.'"

(Qur'an 36:20)»

He was not a prophet.

He held no office.

He possessed only the courage to speak the truth when the majority rejected it.

A single sincere call to guidance was enough for his story to be preserved forever in the Qur'an.

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A Believer from the Family of Pharaoh

Even in the most dangerous environments, Allah raises defenders of the truth.

The Qur'an tells of a believing man from Pharaoh's own household who concealed his faith.

Allah says:

«"And a believing man from the family of Pharaoh, who concealed his faith, said..."

(Qur'an 40:28)»

He lived at the very center of a tyrannical regime.

Yet he used his position to defend Prophet Musa (Moses).

He did not possess the staff of Moses.

He did not part the sea.

Yet his courage to speak against injustice in the presence of power made him one of the Qur'an's memorable figures.

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Pharaoh's Magicians: A Transformation That Changed History

Ironically, one of the most inspiring groups in the Qur'an came from among Pharaoh's magicians.

They arrived intending to defeat Moses.

But once they witnessed the truth, they immediately believed.

Pharaoh threatened to crucify them and amputate their hands and feet.

Their response was unwavering:

«"So decree whatever you wish to decree. You can only decree concerning this worldly life."

(Qur'an 20:72)»

They had believed only moments earlier, yet their courage surpassed that of many who had known the truth for years.

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Breaking the Myth of Waiting

When all of these stories are viewed together, a clear pattern emerges.

None of them were prophets.

Some did not live alongside a prophet.

Some are not even mentioned by name.

Yet they all shared one characteristic:

They did not wait.

They did not wait for miracles.

They did not wait for positions of authority.

They did not wait for majority support.

They used what Allah had already placed in their hands.

Dhul-Qarnayn used power.

Luqman used wisdom.

The People of the Cave used courage.

The People of the Trench used steadfastness.

The man from the far end of the city used his voice.

The believer from Pharaoh's family used his position.

Pharaoh's magicians used the freedom to choose truth over falsehood.

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The Question That Remains

The real question, then, is not:

"Do I possess miracles like the prophets?"

Rather, it is:

"What means has Allah already given me today, and have I used them in the service of truth?"

For in the Qur'an, great history is not written only by prophets.

It is also written by ordinary men and women who choose to stand on the side of what is right.

And often, that choice is enough to change the course of history.

The Miracle of Information: When the Qur'an Reveals History Whose Traces Have Vanished How Can Someone Know an Event They Ne...


The Miracle of Information: When the Qur'an Reveals History Whose Traces Have Vanished

How Can Someone Know an Event They Never Witnessed?

Imagine a historian attempting to reconstruct an event that took place thousands of years ago.

He was not present at the scene.

He did not know the people involved.

He did not witness with his own eyes how the event unfolded.

So how can he know what truly happened?

In modern historiography, this question has given rise to an entire discipline of study.

Historians collect documents, examine artifacts, verify sources, compare testimonies, and then construct a narrative based on whatever evidence remains.

Yet the Qur'an presents a very different phenomenon.

Whenever it recounts events from the distant past, Allah repeatedly reminds Prophet Muhammad ﷺ that he never witnessed those events.

One example appears in Surah Āl 'Imrān, verse 44:

«"That is from the news of the unseen which We reveal to you, [O Muhammad]. You were not with them when they cast their pens as to which of them should be responsible for Mary, nor were you with them when they disputed."

(Qur'an 3:44)»

At first glance, the verse seems straightforward.

But upon deeper reflection, it touches one of the most fundamental questions in the study of history:

How do human beings know the past?

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The Fundamental Principle of Historical Reconstruction

In academic historiography, there is an ideal that every historian seeks to achieve:

To understand the past as though he were present when it happened.

Of course, no historian is actually present.

He merely strives to approach the event as closely as possible through the available evidence.

For this reason, history is often described as an attempt to reconstruct the past.

The past itself cannot be repeated.

What remains are only its traces.

From those traces, historians attempt to rebuild a picture of what once occurred.

They work much like detectives arriving at a crime scene years after the event.

The more complete the evidence, the stronger the reconstruction.

The fewer the surviving traces, the greater the room for speculation and interpretation.

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How Historians Reconstruct the Past

Historians generally follow four major stages.

First Stage: Heuristics

This is the process of gathering sources.

Historians collect documents, inscriptions, artifacts, travel accounts, manuscripts, and oral testimonies.

They search for anything that may provide clues about the past.

Without sources, history cannot be written.

This stage resembles collecting scattered pieces of a puzzle.

Second Stage: Verification

Once sources are found, another question arises:

Are these sources authentic?

Can the information they contain be trusted?

At this stage, historians conduct two forms of criticism:

- External criticism, to test the authenticity of documents and artifacts.
- Internal criticism, to evaluate the reliability of the information itself.

Not every ancient document is automatically true.

Not every witness is automatically honest.

Therefore, every source must first be scrutinized.

Third Stage: Interpretation

After the evidence is deemed credible, historians begin connecting the facts.

Why did the event occur?

What caused it?

What were its consequences?

Here interpretation enters the process.

Two historians may work from the same evidence yet arrive at different conclusions.

Facts do not speak for themselves.

Human beings interpret them.

Fourth Stage: Historiography

The final stage is writing.

The verified and interpreted facts are organized into a coherent historical narrative.

This is the form in which society ultimately encounters "history."

Yet historians themselves recognize that what they write is fundamentally a reconstruction, not the past itself.

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The Limits of Human Reconstruction

Here lies a major challenge.

Not every event leaves traces behind.

Many documents are lost.

Many witnesses die.

Many artifacts are destroyed.

Even when evidence survives, human beings still face bias, competing interests, and limitations of interpretation.

For this reason, historical knowledge is inherently probabilistic.

It is built upon the best available evidence, yet always remains open to revision when new evidence emerges.

In classical Islamic terminology, such knowledge is zhannī—a strong and reasonable conclusion, but not absolute certainty.

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When Revelation Transcends the Limits of History

This is where Surah Āl 'Imrān verse 44 introduces a profoundly different perspective.

Allah does not merely narrate the story of Maryam.

He also identifies the source of that information.

«"You were not with them."»

This statement is crucial.

Prophet Muhammad ﷺ was not present during those events.

He did not witness the casting of lots.

He did not observe the dispute among the scholars of the Children of Israel.

Nor did he learn these details from teachers who had firsthand knowledge of the event.

As an unlettered Prophet (ummi), he did not study historical records from previous civilizations.

So where did this information come from?

The Qur'an answers directly:

«"We reveal it to you."»

Here lies what may be called a miracle of information.

If historians build bridges to the past through surviving traces, then Prophet Muhammad ﷺ received information directly from Allah—the One who witnessed every event from the moment it occurred.

Allah requires no documents.

Allah requires no witnesses.

Allah requires no artifacts.

For He is Himself the Witness over all of history.

---

Two Paths to Knowledge of the Past

This distinction gives rise to two very different epistemologies.

Historical reconstruction moves from evidence toward conclusions.

Revelation moves from Allah's knowledge toward human awareness.

Historians work with probabilities.

Revelation comes with certainty.

Historians strive to approach truth.

Revelation proceeds from Truth itself.

Therefore, for a believer, the historical accounts found in the Qur'an are not merely narratives of the past.

They are information originating from a source that transcends space, time, and human limitation.

---

The Great Lesson Behind This Verse

Interestingly, the primary purpose of this verse is not merely to tell the story of Maryam.

It also serves as evidence of the prophethood of Muhammad ﷺ.

Allah is, in effect, presenting humanity with a question:

How could a man who was not present, who did not study earlier scriptures, who was not trained by historians, and who lived among an unlettered people know such hidden details of ancient events?

The Qur'an offers a simple answer:

Because that information came from Allah.

Thus, Qur'an 3:44 is not only about Maryam.

It is also about the source of knowledge.

It is about the limits of human methods.

And it is about revelation as a window through which humanity can learn realities that ordinary investigation could never fully uncover.

---

When History Ends and Faith Begins

Even the greatest historian can only say:

«"This is the most plausible reconstruction based on the available evidence."»

The Qur'an speaks in a different voice.

It does not offer conjecture.

It delivers news.

For its source is not a human being researching history, but Allah, the Creator of history itself.

This verse therefore teaches intellectual humility.

No matter how advanced human efforts to investigate the past may become, there will always remain realms of knowledge beyond human reach.

And it is there that revelation enters.

Not to silence reason, but to complement its limitations.

Not to replace the pursuit of knowledge, but to remind us that above all human knowledge stands the knowledge of Allah, encompassing all things.


The Story of the Cow and the Limits of Human Reason A shocking murder case shook the Children of Israel. The victim was no ordin...


The Story of the Cow and the Limits of Human Reason

A shocking murder case shook the Children of Israel.

The victim was no ordinary man. He was a wealthy landowner with immense riches. Yet despite his vast fortune, there was one striking reality about his life: he had no children to inherit his wealth.

One day, the wealthy man was found dead. His body lay in front of a resident's house. The first person to discover the corpse was one of his own relatives.

News of the murder spread rapidly throughout the community.

People began to speculate.

Who was the killer?

Was it the relative who had first found the body?

Or was it the owner of the house in front of which the corpse had been discovered?

Accusations flew in every direction. Suspicion and blame divided the people. Yet one major problem remained: no one possessed any evidence that could reveal the true culprit.

The investigation reached a dead end.

As tensions escalated, a righteous man stepped forward to calm the crowd.

"Why do you continue arguing among yourselves?" he asked. "Is not Musa (Moses), the Messenger of Allah, among you? Let us ask him about this matter."

The suggestion was accepted.

The people gathered and went to Prophet Musa, seeking a solution to the baffling crime.

Musa turned to Allah for guidance. He did not rely on speculation, public opinion, or conclusions built upon suspicion. Instead, he waited for judgment from the One who knows all that is hidden.

Then revelation came.

But the command astonished everyone.

Allah instructed them to slaughter a cow.

Immediately, the situation became even more confusing.

What connection could there possibly be between a murder investigation and the slaughter of a cow?

How could sacrificing an animal reveal the identity of a murderer?

From a human perspective, there appeared to be no logical relationship between the two.

For this reason, the Children of Israel responded with sarcasm.

 "Are you making a mockery of us?" they asked Musa.

To them, the command seemed irrational.

But Musa replied firmly:

"I seek refuge in Allah from being among the ignorant."

Musa understood that the role of a prophet is not to devise solutions based solely on human logic, but to convey guidance that comes from Allah.

Instead of obeying the command immediately, the Children of Israel prolonged the matter with endless questions.

They asked about the cow's age.

They asked about its color.

They asked about its distinguishing characteristics.

The more questions they asked, the more detailed the specifications became.

What had originally been simple gradually became difficult.

Eventually, after a long process filled with hesitation and objections, they found a cow that matched the divine description.

The cow was slaughtered.

Then Allah commanded them to strike the victim's body with a portion of the cow.

At that moment, something utterly unimaginable occurred.

The dead man came back to life.

Before the astonished crowd, he identified his murderer.

The culprit was not the person whom most people had suspected.

It was his own relative—the very man who had claimed to be the first to discover the body.

A case that could not be solved through suspicion, accusations, or human investigation was ultimately resolved through the guidance of Allah.


---

A Lesson About Reason, Effort, and Revelation

This story contains a profound lesson about the relationship between human reason, human effort, and divine revelation.

The Children of Israel were trapped in a particular way of thinking: every solution must have a cause-and-effect relationship that can be understood by human logic.

When Allah commanded something that seemed unrelated to the problem they were facing, they rejected it before seeking to understand it.

Yet one of humanity's greatest limitations is assuming that all reality can be grasped by the human intellect.

Reason is indeed a magnificent gift.

Through it, human beings investigate, analyze, and solve problems.

But reason has limits.

It can only operate based on available information and observable patterns of cause and effect.

Allah's knowledge, however, encompasses both what is visible and what is hidden.

For this reason, the story of the cow is not an invitation to abandon logic. Rather, it is a lesson against allowing logic to become a source of arrogance.

Reason is a tool for understanding Allah's guidance, not a judge that determines whether Allah's guidance deserves obedience.

The scholars of tafsir explain that the greatest mistake of the Children of Israel was not that they asked questions. Rather, they questioned with a spirit of resistance and a desire to find loopholes that would allow them to avoid obedience.

They did not use reason to understand revelation.

They used reason to test revelation and delay obedience to it.

And herein lies the central message of the story.

When all human paths reach a dead end, Allah can open a way that human beings could never have imagined.

Solutions do not always emerge from intelligence, experience, or complex calculations.

Often, they begin with something more fundamental: prayer, humility, and obedience to Allah.

Musa did not begin solving the problem with speculation.

He began with supplication.

The Children of Israel only found the answer after carrying out Allah's command.

Thus, the story of the cow teaches that beyond effort and reasoning lies a key that human beings often forget: obedience to Allah.

When a servant has done everything within their power and then submits to Allah's guidance, Allah can open doors from directions they never expected.

As the Qur'an repeatedly teaches, the One who created all causes is never limited by the causes themselves. He is fully capable of bringing solutions from beyond the reach of human imagination.

Surahs in the Qur'an That End with Supplications: Three Prayers, One Journey Why do the first three surahs of the Qur'an...

Surahs in the Qur'an That End with Supplications: Three Prayers, One Journey

Why do the first three surahs of the Qur'an end with prayers?

It is a fascinating question to contemplate. The Qur'an is a book of guidance, knowledge, law, and education. Yet when we open the Mushaf from the beginning, we discover something remarkable: the first three surahs—Al-Fatihah, Al-Baqarah, and Āl 'Imrān—all conclude with supplications.

It is as if Allah wishes to teach humanity a fundamental lesson: no matter how much knowledge one possesses, how great one's efforts are, or how much guidance one has received, human beings remain in need of Allah's help.

When examined closely, these three prayers form a complete spiritual journey. It begins with a request for guidance, continues with a plea for strength to follow that guidance, and concludes with a hope to die in the best possible state.

Surah Al-Fatihah: The Prayer for Guidance

Al-Fatihah concludes with the most fundamental of all supplications:

> "Ihdinaṣ-ṣirāṭal-mustaqīm."

"Guide us to the Straight Path."

(Qur'an 1:6)



Interestingly, this prayer is taught to people who already believe.

If a believer already possesses faith, why must they continue asking for guidance?

The answer lies in the broad meaning of hidayah (guidance).

The scholars explain that Allah grants humanity several layers of guidance.

The Guidance of Instinct

From the moment of birth, human beings are equipped with instincts that enable them to survive.

A newborn infant instinctively seeks its mother's milk without ever being taught.

Likewise, bees build their hives, ants store food, and birds construct their nests.

All of these are forms of innate guidance granted by Allah.

Yet instinct can move in two directions. The instinct for survival may inspire lawful hard work, but it may also lead to theft, deception, and wrongdoing.

Therefore, human beings need a higher form of guidance.

The Guidance of the Senses

Allah has equipped humanity with sight, hearing, and the other senses.

Through them, people come to know the world around them.

Educators often say:

> "The senses are the gateways to knowledge."



Yet the senses have limitations.

Eyes can be deceived.

Ears can mishear.

Many realities remain beyond sensory perception.

Thus, human beings require a higher level of guidance.

The Guidance of Reason

Through reason, human beings can connect causes and effects, develop knowledge, and recognize the signs of Allah's greatness.

Reason can lead a person to acknowledge the existence of a Creator.

It can even point toward the reality of life after death.

Yet reason also has limits.

What seems unquestionably true to one person may appear false to another.

Reason is often overpowered by desires, interests, and emotions.

Therefore, humanity still requires another form of guidance.

The Guidance of Revelation

This is the highest form of guidance, sent by Allah through His messengers.

Religion comes to correct instinct, direct the senses, and guide the intellect.

Through revelation, people learn who their Lord is, why they exist, and what path leads to success in this life and the next.

Yet even revelation is not enough if it remains merely known and understood.

Human beings still need divine assistance (tawfiq) to act upon it.

That is why Al-Fatihah concludes with the prayer:

> "Guide us to the Straight Path."



Not merely to know the path, but to be guided upon it until the end of life.


---

Surah Al-Baqarah: The Prayer for Strength to Follow Guidance

If Al-Fatihah teaches us to seek guidance, Al-Baqarah teaches us to seek strength to carry the responsibilities that guidance entails.

The longest surah in the Qur'an concludes with a profound supplication:

> "Our Lord, do not hold us accountable if we forget or make mistakes..."

(Qur'an 2:286)



This closing prayer comes after Allah has explained laws, commandments, prohibitions, jihad, zakat, fasting, pilgrimage, family matters, economics, and social life.

After presenting the entirety of this guidance, Allah reminds humanity of an important reality:

> "Allah does not burden a soul beyond its capacity."



Islam is not a religion built upon hardship.

Allah says:

> "Allah intends ease for you and does not intend hardship for you."

(Qur'an 2:185)



Yet despite the suitability of divine law to human capacity, people remain vulnerable to forgetfulness, mistakes, and shortcomings.

Therefore Allah teaches His servants to pray:

for forgiveness of their errors,

for relief from burdens,

for strength to fulfill their responsibilities,

for mercy,

and for victory.


There is a profound lesson here.

Prayer is not a substitute for effort.

Prayer perfects effort.

Human beings are still required to learn, work, struggle, and act. But after every effort has been made, they recognize that success ultimately remains in Allah's hands.

Thus, Al-Baqarah concludes with an acknowledgment of human weakness before divine power.


---

Surah Āl 'Imrān: The Prayer for a Good Ending

If Al-Fatihah speaks about guidance and Al-Baqarah speaks about living according to that guidance, then Āl 'Imrān speaks about the end of the journey.

Its closing prayer states:

> "Our Lord, indeed we have heard a caller calling to faith, saying, 'Believe in your Lord,' and we have believed. Our Lord, forgive us our sins, erase our misdeeds, and cause us to die among the righteous."

(Qur'an 3:193)



This verse appears after Allah describes people of understanding who reflect upon the creation of the heavens and the earth.

They do not stop at intellectual admiration.

They are not satisfied with knowledge alone.

They move from reflection to devotion.

They hear the call to faith and respond to it.

They perform righteous deeds and then seek forgiveness.

They live their lives and then pray for a blessed ending.

This supplication teaches that the goal of a believer is not merely to become a person of faith, but to die in a state of faith.

Not merely to begin the journey well, but to finish it well.

That is why they pray:

> "Cause us to die among the righteous."



It is a plea for husnul khatimah—a good ending—and for companionship with the righteous in the Hereafter.


---

Three Prayers, One Journey

When these three surahs are read sequentially, a beautiful educational pattern emerges.

Al-Fatihah teaches:

> "Guide us to the Straight Path."



Al-Baqarah teaches:

> "Help us remain steadfast upon that path."



Āl 'Imrān teaches:

> "Cause us to die upon that path."



This is the journey of a believer.

First, they seek guidance.

Then they struggle to live according to that guidance.

Finally, they pray to complete their lives upon that guidance.

The first three surahs of the Qur'an seem to teach that human beings can never live by their knowledge, strength, or deeds alone.

They are always in need of Allah.

They need His guidance.

They need His help.

And they need His mercy until their very last breath.

For the journey of faith begins with guidance, continues through perseverance, and ends with a prayer for a blessed return to Allah.

Rome, Persia, and Allah's Promise of Sovereignty During the time of the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ, the two greatest powers in the w...

Rome, Persia, and Allah's Promise of Sovereignty

During the time of the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ, the two greatest powers in the world were the Roman Empire and the Persian Empire. Both ruled vast territories and appeared impossible to defeat, especially by the Arabs, who at that time possessed neither significant political influence nor military strength.

In such circumstances, the Prophet ﷺ instilled in his companions the conviction that worldly power did not belong to Rome or Persia. Sovereignty belongs entirely to Allah, who grants it to whom He wills and takes it away from whom He wills.

The Promise to Suraqah During the Hijrah

One of the most remarkable incidents occurred when the Prophet ﷺ and Abu Bakr al-Siddiq were migrating to Madinah.

At that time, Suraqah ibn Malik—who was still a polytheist—pursued the Prophet ﷺ in hopes of claiming the reward of one hundred camels offered by the Quraysh for his capture. Yet every time he drew near, his horse sank into the sand until he realized that the Prophet ﷺ was under Allah's protection.

When Suraqah eventually sought a guarantee of safety, the Prophet ﷺ surprised him with an astonishing prophecy:

 "O Suraqah, what do you think of the day when you will wear the bracelets of Kisra?"

Suraqah, a man from the Arabian desert, was stunned.

He asked,

"Kisra ibn Hurmuz, the King of Persia?"

The Prophet ﷺ replied:

 "Yes, Kisra ibn Hurmuz."

At that moment, the statement seemed almost impossible. The Prophet ﷺ was a fugitive, while Persia was one of the greatest empires on earth.

Yet only a few decades later, during the caliphate of Umar ibn al-Khattab, Persia was conquered. The bracelets of Kisra were brought to Madinah, and Suraqah was summoned to wear them, exactly as the Prophet ﷺ had foretold.

Allah, the Owner of All Sovereignty

It is narrated from Qatadah that the Prophet ﷺ hoped that the two great powers of his time—Rome and Persia—would embrace Islam and become part of his community.

Allah then reminded humanity that authority belongs entirely to Him. No kingdom exists by its own power, and no empire lasts forever.

Allah says:

 "Say, 'O Allah, Owner of Sovereignty, You give sovereignty to whom You will and You take sovereignty away from whom You will. You honor whom You will and You humble whom You will. In Your hand is all good. Indeed, You are over all things competent.'"

(Qur'an 3:26)

This verse establishes a fundamental principle: the rise and fall of civilizations are not determined solely by economic strength, military power, or political influence. Ultimately, they occur by the will of Allah, the Possessor of all dominion.

Prophecies During the Digging of the Trench

The same promise was reaffirmed during the Battle of the Trench (Khandaq).

As the Muslims were digging a defensive trench around Madinah, they encountered a massive rock that none of them could break. The Prophet ﷺ came forward and struck it with a pickaxe. With each strike, a flash of light appeared.

According to the narration of Al-Bara' ibn Azib, after the first strike, the Prophet ﷺ proclaimed:

 "Allahu Akbar! I have been given the keys to Syria. By Allah, I can see its red palaces even now."

He struck the rock a second time and said:

"Allahu Akbar! I have been given the keys to Persia. By Allah, I can see the white palace of Kisra."

Then he struck it a third time and declared:

 "Allahu Akbar! I have been given the keys to Yemen. By Allah, I can see the gates of Sana'a from where I stand."

What makes this event extraordinary is its context.

At that moment, the Muslims were besieged, hungry, and facing the threat of annihilation. Yet it was precisely in those darkest circumstances that the Prophet ﷺ spoke about the collapse of the world's greatest empires.

Constantinople and Rome

Among the Prophet's ﷺ most famous prophecies is the prediction concerning the conquest of Constantinople, the capital of the Eastern Roman Empire.

He said:

 "Constantinople shall indeed be conquered. What an excellent leader will its leader be, and what an excellent army will that army be."

Centuries later, this prophecy was fulfilled when Constantinople was conquered by Mehmed II in 1453 CE.

As for Rome itself, another narration is reported from Abdullah ibn Amr ibn al-As. When asked which city would be conquered first, Constantinople or Rome, the Prophet ﷺ replied:

 "The city of Heraclius (Constantinople) will be conquered first."

This narration indicates that the conquest of Constantinople would precede the conquest of Rome, a subject many scholars associate with major events that will occur near the end of time.

The Greater Lesson

These accounts are not merely stories of military victories.

Behind them lies a much deeper lesson: human beings are often deceived by the magnitude of the powers they see before them.

During the Prophet's ﷺ lifetime, Rome and Persia appeared invincible. Yet Allah demonstrated that even the mightiest empires can collapse in an instant when He wills.

For this reason, a believer places ultimate hope not in human power, but in Allah, the Owner of all kingdoms.

History continues to repeat the same truth:

Empires rise and fall.

Power changes hands.

But the Owner of all power never changes.

As Allah declares:

"You give sovereignty to whom You will and You take sovereignty away from whom You will." (Qur'an 3:26)

And that reality remains as true today as it was in the age of Rome and Persia.

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