Twelve years have passed since the inauguration of Mus'haf Qatar, a civilisational achievement that His Highness the Amir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani, on March 9, 2010, crowned in the first decade of the 21st century, after a journey that lasted for nearly two decades, as an exceptional work worthy of the Noble Book of God, and fulfilling the ambition of this country, and whose name has become synonymous with great achievements.
The journey of this Islamic civilisational achievement began, in particular, in August 1991, when the idea was circulated by those in charge of Islamic Affairs in the corridors of Shariah courts, even before the establishment of the Ministry of Endowments and Islamic Affairs, when the Director of the Department of Islamic Affairs at the time, Dr Khalifa bin Jassim al-Kuwari, submitted a memorandum to the Undersecretary of Shariah Courts, containing a proposal to write a Qur'an (Mus'haf) in the name of Qatar, a proposal that remained the subject of research and study at that time, but without taking any tangible steps, until 1999, when the idea surfaced again.
The revival of the idea of Mus'haf Qatar that year was in the Ministry of Endowments and Islamic Affairs, which directed its study, and set all conditions, controls and standards to produce it in an optimal way, with the idea at that time receiving the supreme approval of His Highness the Father Amir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, and in May 2000, Qatar began the first practical steps in this great civilisational project.
Meanwhile, the Ministry of Endowments and Islamic Affairs began contacting one of the most important centres in the Islamic world in the field of Arabic calligraphy, which is the Research Centre For Islamic History, Art and Culture (IRCICA) in Istanbul and affiliated to the Organisation of Islamic Co-operation (OIC), to follow practical steps. Work teams then began during the year 2000 by preparing for the project, in accordance with the established plan that includes stages and procedures to write Mus'haf Qatar.
After a year of work and perseverance in studying ideas and visions to bring this Qur'an into the light in a distinguished manner, an international competition for Arabic calligraphy was announced to write Mus'haf Qatar, specifically in August 2001.
This competition was the largest of its kind in the history of Arabic calligraphy and the first in the history of writing the Noble Qur'an. It succeeded in attracting about 120 of the most skilled calligraphers in the Islamic world who competed to win the honour of writing before an international jury, formed from experts in the art of Arabic calligraphy.
The arbitration panel then announced in October 2002 in Istanbul that the competition was limited to two calligraphers only to write Mus'haf Qatar. The writing contracts were signed in Doha in June 2003, to begin the ceremony of writing the Noble Quran.
In January 2007, there was another chapter of this project, represented by the arbitration panel meeting to choose the winning version after a period of review, auditing and comparison between the two works according to purely scientific and objective criteria. This required that the names of the two calligraphers be withheld from the authority so that the selection would be accurate, honest and far from any subjective factors, and to announce the winning version of the first place for Syrian calligrapher Ubaidah Mohamed Salih al-Banki, on January 20, 2007, in the presence of all members of the jury, and media outlets.
The calligrapher Ubaidah Mohamed Salih al-Banki told Qatar News Agency (QNA) that his experience in writing the Mus'haf was inspiring, and provided rich experience because it is related to the Noble Book of God, and it came after an international competition that witnessed strong competition between calligraphers around the world.
He added that it has always been his wish to write the Noble Qur'an, but he did not imagine that he would go through this unique experience and have the honour of writing Mus'haf Qatar, which is being shared and read today by millions of Muslims around the world.
He explained that he wrote Mus'haf Qatar twice as part of his participation in the international competition between calligraphers.
He said that his writing of Mus'haf Qatar took about three and a half years of continuous work, and said he wrote it with a feather twice, to come out with this image that was not familiar with the history of the Qur'an.
In his statement to QNA, he confirmed that calligraphy is a precise engineering of letters, and said its rules and technical standards cannot be skipped, especially as you write the Noble Qur'an and added that it is required to abide by various other rules related to Ottoman drawing, and to produce the page in a way that combines beauty and good distribution on each page.
He detailed his writing experience, saying that he studied the page from the Qur'an, then he would write it with the regular "pencil" as a draft, and then he would write it in the final form, and then the stage of correcting and cleaning the letters and putting signs of form and control would begin, so that one page took more than eight hours of continuous work.
After announcing the winning copy, completing all technical requirements, and agreeing on the final form of Mus'haf Qatar, there was a basic and essential task awaiting those in charge of the project. It is to review the Qur'an book before the publication is approved, which is a task that requires wisdom, insight and experience because it is related to the Book of God and a historical project for Qatar.
Those in charge of the project were aware of the importance of this stage of the project of completing Mus'haf Qatar. So a committee was formed for this purpose, and a local committee took over this sacred task, and a committee from Al-Azhar Al-Sharif, headed by Sheikh Ahmed Issa al-Masrawi, Sheikh of the Egyptian Qur'an readers, participated in this mission. The members of these committees held meetings so that the Mus'haf Qatar is reviewed, audited and examined 14 times before its approval for printing, which is the license issued by the Department of Qur'an at Al-Azhar Al-Sharif in January 2009. In addition, Mus'haf Qatar was reviewed and audited after the printing stage.
Printing Mus'haf Qatar was not an easy task, so a committee was formed to print the book and one of its competencies was to prepare the studies and specifications necessary for the printing of the Holy Qur'an and its technical production. This task also included identifying and selecting the appropriate printing press that would undertake the task.
The search for the appropriate printing press was another challenge that would be needed to be overcome, and after suggestions, visits and printing samples of the Qur'an in a number of presses, the Committee settled on the Turkish city of Istanbul due to the distinction of its models from other printing presses.
By the middle of the year 2009, the first edition of Mus'haf Qatar had come to light, after years of diligent work by various committees that were formed to follow up on this project.
On March 9, 2010, Doha had a historical moment witnessed by the Islamic world. From the Museum of Islamic Art, where His Highness the Amir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani attended and under his kind patronage, the ceremony of starting the circulation of Mus'haf Qatar began, as part of celebrating Doha as the capital of Arab culture.
Today, 12 years after the start of circulation of Mus'haf Qatar, about 2.5mn copies are currently being circulated inside and outside Qatar. The Ministry of Endowments and Islamic Affairs continues to maintain the highest technical standards in its printing, to ensure its distribution internally and externally to millions of Muslims in all media, where it is available in text and audio on all phones and smart electronic devices.
The journey of this Islamic civilisational achievement began, in particular, in August 1991, when the idea was circulated by those in charge of Islamic Affairs in the corridors of Shariah courts, even before the establishment of the Ministry of Endowments and Islamic Affairs, when the Director of the Department of Islamic Affairs at the time, Dr Khalifa bin Jassim al-Kuwari, submitted a memorandum to the Undersecretary of Shariah Courts, containing a proposal to write a Qur'an (Mus'haf) in the name of Qatar, a proposal that remained the subject of research and study at that time, but without taking any tangible steps, until 1999, when the idea surfaced again.
The revival of the idea of Mus'haf Qatar that year was in the Ministry of Endowments and Islamic Affairs, which directed its study, and set all conditions, controls and standards to produce it in an optimal way, with the idea at that time receiving the supreme approval of His Highness the Father Amir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, and in May 2000, Qatar began the first practical steps in this great civilisational project.
Meanwhile, the Ministry of Endowments and Islamic Affairs began contacting one of the most important centres in the Islamic world in the field of Arabic calligraphy, which is the Research Centre For Islamic History, Art and Culture (IRCICA) in Istanbul and affiliated to the Organisation of Islamic Co-operation (OIC), to follow practical steps. Work teams then began during the year 2000 by preparing for the project, in accordance with the established plan that includes stages and procedures to write Mus'haf Qatar.
After a year of work and perseverance in studying ideas and visions to bring this Qur'an into the light in a distinguished manner, an international competition for Arabic calligraphy was announced to write Mus'haf Qatar, specifically in August 2001.
This competition was the largest of its kind in the history of Arabic calligraphy and the first in the history of writing the Noble Qur'an. It succeeded in attracting about 120 of the most skilled calligraphers in the Islamic world who competed to win the honour of writing before an international jury, formed from experts in the art of Arabic calligraphy.
The arbitration panel then announced in October 2002 in Istanbul that the competition was limited to two calligraphers only to write Mus'haf Qatar. The writing contracts were signed in Doha in June 2003, to begin the ceremony of writing the Noble Quran.
In January 2007, there was another chapter of this project, represented by the arbitration panel meeting to choose the winning version after a period of review, auditing and comparison between the two works according to purely scientific and objective criteria. This required that the names of the two calligraphers be withheld from the authority so that the selection would be accurate, honest and far from any subjective factors, and to announce the winning version of the first place for Syrian calligrapher Ubaidah Mohamed Salih al-Banki, on January 20, 2007, in the presence of all members of the jury, and media outlets.
The calligrapher Ubaidah Mohamed Salih al-Banki told Qatar News Agency (QNA) that his experience in writing the Mus'haf was inspiring, and provided rich experience because it is related to the Noble Book of God, and it came after an international competition that witnessed strong competition between calligraphers around the world.
He added that it has always been his wish to write the Noble Qur'an, but he did not imagine that he would go through this unique experience and have the honour of writing Mus'haf Qatar, which is being shared and read today by millions of Muslims around the world.
He explained that he wrote Mus'haf Qatar twice as part of his participation in the international competition between calligraphers.
He said that his writing of Mus'haf Qatar took about three and a half years of continuous work, and said he wrote it with a feather twice, to come out with this image that was not familiar with the history of the Qur'an.
In his statement to QNA, he confirmed that calligraphy is a precise engineering of letters, and said its rules and technical standards cannot be skipped, especially as you write the Noble Qur'an and added that it is required to abide by various other rules related to Ottoman drawing, and to produce the page in a way that combines beauty and good distribution on each page.
He detailed his writing experience, saying that he studied the page from the Qur'an, then he would write it with the regular "pencil" as a draft, and then he would write it in the final form, and then the stage of correcting and cleaning the letters and putting signs of form and control would begin, so that one page took more than eight hours of continuous work.
After announcing the winning copy, completing all technical requirements, and agreeing on the final form of Mus'haf Qatar, there was a basic and essential task awaiting those in charge of the project. It is to review the Qur'an book before the publication is approved, which is a task that requires wisdom, insight and experience because it is related to the Book of God and a historical project for Qatar.
Those in charge of the project were aware of the importance of this stage of the project of completing Mus'haf Qatar. So a committee was formed for this purpose, and a local committee took over this sacred task, and a committee from Al-Azhar Al-Sharif, headed by Sheikh Ahmed Issa al-Masrawi, Sheikh of the Egyptian Qur'an readers, participated in this mission. The members of these committees held meetings so that the Mus'haf Qatar is reviewed, audited and examined 14 times before its approval for printing, which is the license issued by the Department of Qur'an at Al-Azhar Al-Sharif in January 2009. In addition, Mus'haf Qatar was reviewed and audited after the printing stage.
Printing Mus'haf Qatar was not an easy task, so a committee was formed to print the book and one of its competencies was to prepare the studies and specifications necessary for the printing of the Holy Qur'an and its technical production. This task also included identifying and selecting the appropriate printing press that would undertake the task.
The search for the appropriate printing press was another challenge that would be needed to be overcome, and after suggestions, visits and printing samples of the Qur'an in a number of presses, the Committee settled on the Turkish city of Istanbul due to the distinction of its models from other printing presses.
By the middle of the year 2009, the first edition of Mus'haf Qatar had come to light, after years of diligent work by various committees that were formed to follow up on this project.
On March 9, 2010, Doha had a historical moment witnessed by the Islamic world. From the Museum of Islamic Art, where His Highness the Amir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani attended and under his kind patronage, the ceremony of starting the circulation of Mus'haf Qatar began, as part of celebrating Doha as the capital of Arab culture.
Today, 12 years after the start of circulation of Mus'haf Qatar, about 2.5mn copies are currently being circulated inside and outside Qatar. The Ministry of Endowments and Islamic Affairs continues to maintain the highest technical standards in its printing, to ensure its distribution internally and externally to millions of Muslims in all media, where it is available in text and audio on all phones and smart electronic devices.