Q and A
Miraculous Features
| Is The Source Of Qur'an 18:60-65 The Epic of Gilgamesh? |
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| Written by mquran.org | |
| Monday, 20 November 2006 | |
1. Introduction
The "junction of the two waters" and the mysterious "servant of God" are two points that Arent Wensinck connects to the Epic of Gilgamesh as the source of the Qur'an. The Epic of Gilgamesh was written in cuneiform tablets about 2000 BCE. The tablets were found by Sir Austen Layardwere and were deciphered in 1873 by the English Assyriologist George Smith:
In the Epic of Gilgamesh, Gilgamesh seeks out Utnapishtim, an immortal being who lives at the mouth of the rivers:
In his article on "Al-Khadir" in the Encyclopaedia Of Islam.[3] (First Edition, 1927, Volume II and reprinted in he the second editions in 1978) Wensinck connects Utnapishtim as the figure behind the mysterious "servant of God" in the Qur'an 18:65, and "junction of the two rivers" or madjma` al-bahrayn in Qur'an 18:60-61 as the "mouth of the rivers" in the Gilgamesh Epic. But Wensinck expresses doubts regarding these connections. The companion of Moses seems to have no connection with the Gilgamesh Epic:
And equating the madjma` al-bahrayn or "junction of the two seas (or rivers)" with Gilgamesh's "mouth of the rivers" has no connection either:
It is clearly seen that Wensinck himself has serious doubts about a clear connection between the Gilgamesh Epic and the Qur'an yet Torrey[6] and Ibn Warraq[7] have claimed, on the authority of Wensinck, that Qur'an 18:60-65 did indeed originated from the Gilgamesh Epic. 2. What Is The Alleged Source Of Qur'an 18:60-65: The Gilgamesh Epic Or Alexander Stories?Earlier scholarship has identified and discussed numerous parallels that exist between the Epic of Gilgamesh and the Alexander stories.[8] Wensinck, however, identifies specific elements in Qur'an 18:60-65 as being from the Epic of Gilgamesh but not from the Alexander stories such as "the junction of the two seas (or rivers)" and the supposedly immortal "servant of God" in Qur'an 18:65. Commenting on the explanations provided by Wensinck on 18:60-65, Wheeler states:
2.1 Immortality Wensinck also draws parallels between the Gilgamesh Epic and the Alexander Stories. Wensinck states that in both the Epic of Gilgamesh and the Alexander stories the hero goes on a quest to gain immortality. Immortality is found at a water source in both accounts and in both the water source is associated with an immortal being with whom the heroes of the stories interact. In the Epic of Gilgamesh, Utnapishtim and his wife are said to have been granted immortality by the gods. The source of immortality for Gilgamesh is a plant at the bottom of the sea. In other Alexander stories, it is Alexander's cook[10] who attains immortality and in one case it is Alexander's daughter[11] who becomes immortal by drinking from the water of life. Comparing the two stories, Wheeler says:
What about the issue of the immortal being found in the Qur'an? Does this have a parallel in the Gilgamesh Epic or the Alexander stories? The Epic of Gilgamesh provides in Utnapishtim a clear example of an immortal being who has esoteric knowledge of the gods. Gilgamesh, like Moses who comes to al-Khidr in the commentaries on the Qur'an 18:60-82, comes to Utnapishtim in search of the meaning of his friend Enkidu's seemingly unjust death. In order to draw a parallel between Utnapishtim and al-Khidr, Lidzbarski had claimed that the name al-Khidr was a jumbled form of the Sumerian name of Utnapishtim, "Ziusudra", and it is transcribed in German as "Chasisadra".[13] In the Alexander stories, however, it is unclear which character should be identified as the parallel of Utnapishtim and al-Khidr. The versions of Alexander stories that have been influenced by the Qur'anic commentaries on 18:60-82 depict al-Khidr as the immortal being. In the Greek recension b and in the sermon of Jacob of Serugh, Alexander is led into the land of darkness by an (wise) old man. In the land of darkness, both the stories say that it was the cook who discovered the water of life and becomes immortal with the fish. Thus a combination of these two different characters from the Alexander stories, the wise man and the immortal man, that parallels closely the model of the wise and immortal Utnapishtim in the Gilgamesh Epic. There are other problems with Wensinck's contention that both Gilgamesh and Alexander go on a quest to gain immortality. As Wheeler has correctly noted, it is an over implication of the two stories by Wensinck.[14] In the Epic of Gilgamesh, the cause of Gilgamesh's journey in search of Utnapishtim is Enkidu's seemingly unjust death. Gilgamesh travels through the gate at the Mashu mountains, and for twelve leagues through the land of darkness, until he arrives at a garden in which gems grow by the edge of the sea. Gilgamesh meets a young woman called Sidduri in the garden. Sidduri tells Gilgamesh about Urshanabi, who might ferry Gilgamesh across of the sea to Utnapishtim. Gilgamesh and Sidduri travel together for three days and meet Utnapishtim and his wife at Dilmun. Utnapishtim tell Gilgamesh two secrets of the gods: the story of the flood and a story about the existence of a plant at the bottom of the sea which restores men to their youth. Gilgamesh retrieves the plant, but on his return to his home in Uruk to share the plant with his companions, a snake eats the plant. As for the quest of immortality in the Alexander stories, it is important to note that not all of the versions describe Alexander's quest for immortality at the water of life. The themes of the quest for immortality in later Greek, Persian and Ethiopic recensions are different.[15] Based on this evidence, Wheeler comes to the conclusion that it was not Qur'an 18:60-82 that had borrowed from the Epic of Gilgamesh. Rather it was the Qur'anic commentaries that used the elements present in the Epic of Gilgamesh which surfaced in the Alexander stories along with the stories associated with the Sa`b Dhul-Qarnayn to explain the Qur'an 18:60-82. He depicts it pictorially as:[16]
Stressing the difference between the Qur'an and the Qur'anic commentaries that use the the elements present of the Epic of Gilgamesh that surface in the Alexander stories, Wheeler adds that:
2.2 The Junction Of The Two Waters Wensinck has already admitted that there is no connection between the madjma` al-bahrayn or "junction of the two seas (or rivers)" with Gilgamesh's "mouth of the rivers" or with the Alexander stories. Let us summarise the issue of the waters and the difference between the various accounts:[18]
Wheeler says that the Qur'anic exegesis were not familiar with the name of Gilgamesh, though they were familiar with certain elements of the Gilgamesh story, notably Gilgamesh's journey to Utnapishtim. It is possible that in late antiquity and beyond, the Gilgamesh story was known through the medium of the Alexander stories and that the figure of Alexander represented Gilgamesh.[19] 3. ConclusionsIt was claimed by Wensinck that specific elements in Qur'an 18:60-65 were borrowed from the Epic of Gilgamesh such as the "meeting place of the two waters" and the supposedly immortal "servant of God". Wheeler pointed out that the connection seen by Wensinck are not based on Qur'an 18:60-65 but on the information attributed to these verses in the Qur'anic commentaries. Wensinck does not make any distinction between the Qur'an and its commentaries. The commentaries give no indication of being aware of the Epic of Gilgamesh. It is most likely that the Qur'anic commentaries used elements present in the Epic of Gilgamesh (which surfaced in the Alexander stories) along with the stories associated with the Sa`b Dhul-Qarnayn to explain Qur'an 18:60-82.
References & Notes[1] "Gilgamesh Epic", Funk & Wagnalls New Encyclopaedia, ©1995 Funk & Wagnalls Corporation, Infopedia 2.0, SoftKey Multimedia Inc. [2] "Al-Khadir", Encyclopaedia Of Islam, 1978, Volume IV, E. J. Brill (Leiden) & Luzac & Co. (London), pp. 902. [3] ibid., p. 902-903. [4] ibid., p. 903. [5] ibid. [6] C. C. Torrey, The Jewish Foundation Of Islam, 1967, Ktav Publishing House, Inc.: New York, pp. 123-125. [7] Ibn Warraq, Why I Am Not A Muslim, 1995, Prometheus Books: Amherst, NY, p. 60. [8] B. Meissner, Alexander Und Gilgamos, 1894, Druck von A. Pries: Leipzig. [9] B. M. Wheeler, "Moses Or Alexander? Early Islamic Exegesis Of Qur'an 18:60-65", Journal Of Near Eastern Studies, 1998, Volume 57, p. 204. [10] E. A. W. Budge, The History Of Alexander The Great Being The Syriac Version Of The Pseudo-Callisthenes, 1889, Cambridge: At The University Press, lines 170-197 on pp. 172-175. [11] R. Stoneman, The Greek Alexander Romance, 1991, Penguin Books, pp. 119-122. [12] B. M. Wheeler, "Moses Or Alexander? Early Islamic Exegesis Of Qur'an 18:60-65", Journal Of Near Eastern Studies, op cit., p. 205. [13] M. Lidzbarski, "Wer Ist Chadhir?", Zeitschrift Für Assyriologie Und Verwandte Gebiete, 1892, Volume 7, p. 111. [14] B. M. Wheeler, "Moses Or Alexander? Early Islamic Exegesis Of Qur'an 18:60-65", Journal Of Near Eastern Studies, op cit., p. 206. [15] ibid., pp. 206-207. [16] ibid., p. 208. [17] ibid. [18] ibid., pp. 208-209. [19] ibid., p. 210. John D'Urso, M S M Saifullah & Elias Karim © Islamic Awareness, All Rights Reserved. |
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