Sheikh Mahmoud Khalil al-Hussary (Arabic: الشَّيْخ مَحْمُود خَلِيل الْحُصَرِيّ ash-Shaykh Maḥmūd Khalīl al-Ḥuṣarī; September 17, 1917 – November 24, 1980) also known as Al-Hussary, was an Egyptian qāriʾ widely acclaimed for his accurate recitation of the Qur'an.[1][2][3][5] Al-Hussary committed the entire Qur'an to memory by age 8 and started reciting at public gatherings by age 12. In 1944, Al-Hussary won Egypt Radio's Qu'ran Recitation competition which had around 200 participants, including veterans like Muhammad Rifat.[5] The quadrumvirate of El Minshawy, Abdul Basit, Mustafa Ismail, and Al-Hussary are generally considered the most important and famous qurrāʾ of modern times to have had an outsized impact on the Islamic world.[6][7][8][9]: 83
Shaykh al Maqâri Mahmoud Khalil Al-Hussary | |
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الشَّيْخ مَحْمُود خَلِيل الْحُصَرِيّ | |
Personal | |
Born | Mahmoud Khalil September 17, 1917 |
Died | November 24, 1980 63) | (aged
Religion | Sunni Islam |
Nationality | Egyptian |
Children |
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Alma mater | Al Azhar University,[1] Cairo |
Known for | |
Other names |
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Occupation |
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At-Tin (murattal), Al-Hussary |
Career
Early life
Mahmoud entered the Qur'an School at the age of four, and by age 9[1][10] (or by 11),[5] he had already memorized the entire Qur'an. By age 11, he had enrolled for training at the acclaimed al-Badawi Mosque in Tanta.[5] He later joined Al-Azhar University in Cairo[1] and was conferred with diploma in al-Qirāʾāt al-ʿAshar (Arabic: الْقِرَاءَات الْعَشَر, lit. 'the ten recitations').[11][10]
Service
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He moved to Cairo and joined Egypt's official Qur'an radio station as a reciter making his first appearance on February 16, 1944. Just a year later, in 1945, al-Hussary was appointed reciter at the Ahmad al-Badawi mosque.[5][10] On August 7, 1948, he was nominated mu'adhin of the Sidi Hamza Mosque and later, a muqriʾ (Arabic: مُقْرِئ, lit. 'reciter') at the same mosque.[12] He also supervised recitation centers in the al-Gharbia province.[12] Though a conflicting report claims he served at the Ahmad al-Badawi mosque for 10 straight years.[5]
In 1955, he was appointed to the Al-Hussein Mosque in Cairo and remained in-service there for 29 years, until his death.[5][12]
He achieved numerous accolades during this time.
At Al-Azhar
After returning to Cairo, al-Hussary studied and taught at Al-Azhar University.[5] In 1960, he led the department of al-Ḥadīth bi-Jāmiʿ al-Buḥūth al-ʾIslāmiyya (Arabic: الْحَدِيث بِجَامِع الْبُحُوث الْإِسْلَامِيَّة) for correcting Qur'anic codexes present in the al-Azhar libraries.[11][10]
As one of the four top-ranking reciters in Egypt,[6] he recorded the complete Qur'anic text in both styles of recitation, murattal (tarteel) and mujawwad (tajwid) and was, in fact, first-ever qāriʾ to record and broadcast the murattal style.[1][4] He recorded and wrote treatises on various Qur'an recital styles: Ḥafs ʿan ʿĀṣim in 1961,[10] Warsh ʿan Nāfiʾ in 1964, Qālān ʿan Nāfiʾ and ad-Dūrī ʿan Abi ʿAmr in 1968.[1][5][11] In the same year, he recorded the Qu'ran in the style known as al-Muṣḥaf al-Muʿallim (Arabic: المصحف المُعلّم, lit. 'the Teaching Qur'an'), a technique of tartīl with exclusive focus on pedagogy.[5]
Al-Hussary authored 12 books on Qur'anic sciences in a bid to end corruption of both the text and the recitation styles.[5][10]
Recognition and awards
In 1944, Al-Hussary won Egypt Radio's Qu'ran Recitation competition[10] which had around 200 participants, among them some veterans like Muhammad Rifat, Ali Mahmud, and Abd Al-Fattah Ash-Sha'sha'i.[5]
Al-Azhar awarded him the title Shaykh al-Maqāriʾ (Arabic: شـيخ المقارِئ, lit. 'Scholar of the Reciting Schools') in 1957.[10][11] He was also appointed to the board of Islamic research on Hadith and the Qur'an at Al-Azhar.[5]
He was a recipient of the Egyptian Medal of Honour for Arts and Sciences, First Grade, from the Egyptian president Gamal 'Abd Al-Nasir, in 1967. The same year, he was elected the President of the Islamic World League of Qur'an Reciters.[5][10]
Tours
In 1960, he travelled to Pakistan and India, the first Egyptian qāriʾ to do so, to recite at a conference[13] in the presence of the first Prime Minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru, and the first Egyptian President, Gamal Abdul Nasir.[1][14] He accompanied the Rector of Al-Azhar University on their travels.[5] He was invited to participate in the World of Islam Festival[15] in London (1976).[16] He has recited the Qur'an in front of the American Congress, the United Nations in 1977,[5][14] and at Buckingham Palace in 1978.[1] He has been on Qur'an recital tours to the Philippines, China, France, and Singapore; in addition to touring other Muslim countries, mostly during the month of Ramadan.[5][11]
Technique
Al Hussary was a strong proponent of preserving the qiraat art-form in its original scheme (tarteel) and was publicly apprehensive of innovation in recital delivery techniques.[9]: 110 He once said:[5]
The tarteel shapes every word with an evocative manner, a fact that cannot be produced during a pure "chanted" interpretation where words are subjected to a certain musicality which can be opposing to the necessary sound print to reach the real meaning. And if we feel the melodic saturation during the “chanted” interpretation, we feel, on the other hand, calmness and introversion during tarteel derived from the message of the holy Qur'an.
In another instance, he said:[5]
The tarteel puts us directly on the screen of the Qur'anic text. It puts us in an active listening position and makes the listener feel the responsibility to listen. However, "chanted" restitution borrows passages of introversion by an envelope of jollity; the tarteel is more difficult because it reveals faithfully the meaning. The roots of tarteel deal basically with the Qur'anic text and not the musical rhythms.
In the preface of one of his books, Ma` Al-Qur’an Al-Karim (lit. With the Holy Qur'an), Shaykh Mahmud Shaltut, the then chief Imam of the al-Azhar mosque, said about him:[5]
God has given to many people the goods of this world and beyond, and granted them by giving them happiness in the two shelters through this right path, the path of the holy Qur'an. They learned it, recite it and honoured it as it should be. They struggled to protect it and found joy in it because it always guided them towards truth and the right path. Among those, I have known our son Sheikh Khalîl Al-Husarî. I have descoverd in him an excellent recitor who observes God with a huge fear in his recitation by following the methodology of our pious precursors in the reading of Allah’s Book, and never moved aside from it. His recitation fulfils the hearts with peace, security and calmness, and opens to his audience the gates of faith.
Death
He died of liver failure[11] on 24 November 1980 during a trip to Kuwait.[4] His last public recitals were at the Kaaba in Mecca and Masjid al Nabawi in Medina.[10]
Legacy
Based on Al-Hussary's life,[12] a TV series titled ʾImām al-Muqriʾīn (Arabic: إِمَام الْمُقْرِئِين, lit. 'The Chief of Qur'an Reciters') starring Hassan Youssef was created by Dr. Bahaa El-Din Ibrahim and directed by Mustafa Al-Shall,[17] with backing from Hussary's children, Mohammed Al-Hussary and Yasmine Al-Khayam.[18]
At the time of his death in 1980, he left a third of his wealth to build a mosque on Al-Ajuzah Street in Cairo.[5][10][19]: 155 In his will, he left the expenses for the mosque he had built in Tanta, as well as for the three Islamic institutes and a center dedicated to Qur'an memorization, Maʿhad al-ʾAzhar (Arabic: معهد الأزهر, lit. 'the luminous institute'), in his village, Shobra al-Namla.[5][11]
In what's a testament to Al-Hussary's standing in the profession, Mohammed Burhanuddin, a strong proponent of Qur'anic sciences, education, and memorization,[20][21] conferred his grandson, Husain Burhanuddin, with the title Ḥuṣarī l-Hind (Arabic: حُصَرِيّ الهند, lit. 'Hussary of India').[3]
The 26th International Qur'an Contest hosted by Egypt was named after him in his honour.[22]
Al-Hussary's family runs a charity called the "Shaykh al-Hussary Society" (Arabic: جَمْعِيَّة الشَّيْخ الْحُصَرِيّ, romanized: Jamʿiyyat ash/-Shaykh al-Ḥuṣarī), chaired by his daughter, Yasmeen al-Khayam (née Al-Hussary).[23] The Society built Al-Hosary, the largest mosque in 6th of October City, inaugurated in October 2005,[24] in his honour. The mosque complex, a major landmark of the city, also has an orphanage, a Qur'anic institute, and multi-purpose auditoriums.[25] The mosque rather remarkably hosts sermons from contrarians such as Amr Khaled[26] as well as orthodox clergy of Al-Azhar,[19]: 155 and government ministers.[24] The Society has been instrumental in resettling Syrian refugees in Egypt.[27]
Al-Hussary's recordings are extensively used for Qur'anic memorization and recitation throughout the Muslim world.[8][28][29][30][31]
References
External links
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