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Quran Text &
History
N 1972, during the restoration of the Great Mosque of
Sana'a, 2in Yemen, laborers working in a loft between the structure's inner and
outer roofs stumbled across a remarkable gravesite, although they did not
realize it at the time. Their ignorance was excusable:
mosques do not normally house graves, and this site contained no tombstones, no
human remains, no funereal jewelry. It contained nothing more, in fact, than an
unappealing mash of old parchment and paper documents -- damaged books and
individual pages of Arabic text, fused together by centuries of rain and
dampness, gnawed into over the years by rats and insects. Intent on completing
the task at hand, the laborers gathered up the manuscripts, pressed them into
some twenty potato sacks, and set them aside on the staircase of one of the
mosque's minarets, where they were locked away -- and where they would probably
have been forgotten once again, were it not for Qadhi Isma'il al-Akwa', then the
president of the Yemeni Antiquities Authority, who realized the potential
importance of the find.
Part 1
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Part 2
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Part 3
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