Ali Quli Qarai Quran Pdf ❲90% COMPLETE❳
Requital. The precision struck him. This wasn't a scholar trying to be beautiful. It was a scholar trying to be faithful — to preserve the syntax, the rhythm, the legal and philosophical weight of every Arabic root. It read like a bridge, not a destination.
It was an English translation of the Quran Reza had never seen before. The title page read: The Qur’an: With a Phrase-by-Phrase English Translation — by Ali Quli Qarai.
He clicked on a random verse, Surah Al-Rahman (55:60). Pickthall says: "Is the reward of goodness aught save goodness?" Qarai said: "Is the requital of goodness anything but goodness?" ali quli qarai quran pdf
By dawn, Reza had a plan. He would clean up the OCR errors, add a linked index, and upload the to a public domain archive. He titled the file: Qarai_Quran_Phrase_by_Phrase.pdf
And somewhere, in the quiet archive of digital charity, the careful, phrase-by-phrase ghost of Ali Quli Qarai kept fulfilling its quiet promise: to let the Quran speak, as much as English allows, in its own original grammar of grace. Requital
Reza learned that Qarai, an Iranian scholar educated in Qom, had spent over a decade on this work in the 1990s. He rejected the common "dynamic equivalence" (thought-for-thought) for "formal equivalence" (word-for-word). The result was a translation that felt strange at first — almost literal — but then, dazzlingly clear.
Inside was a PDF.
Reza knew the standard translations: the poetic Pickthall, the eloquent Yusuf Ali. But this was different. As he scrolled, he noticed the layout. On the right, the crisp Arabic script in Uthmani Taha style. On the left, not a flowing paragraph, but a meticulous, almost clinical, word-for-word rendering.