No. Not interested.
2006-12-28 22:24:20
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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No I have not read it. But am also intelligent enough to know that there are no murderous passages promoting evil in it. The Quaran should be given the same respect as the Bible and the Dead Sea Scrolls. It is not the book or the religion that promotes hate, it is the warped view by a few people that has people attention.
2006-12-28 22:32:47
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answer #2
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answered by Cherry_Blossom 5
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No I have not. My question to you is, have you read the Holy Bible cover to cover? This country was founded on teachings from the Holy Bible, not the Koran. I realize there are similarities. Jesus is even in the Koran as a great prophet. I also realize that someone with a radical mindset could use the Bible for violence just as they do with the Koran. If one reads the Bible, old and new testament, they will see that we are in a new convent with the arrival of Jesus. Jesus is unmistakably God on earth, who died for us. People who follow the Koran seem to be of the mindset that they must die for their god. I don't see how anyone could make that same mistake by reading the Holy Bible.
2006-12-28 23:50:13
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answer #3
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answered by TNT 3
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Yes, I have. It would be a revelation to most Christians to find the similarities between it and the Bible--and it is no more violent than the Old Testament, and a lot more interesting at points. Don't allow yourself to be brainwashed by the Western media or by the fanatical fringe of Islam. Read and think for yourself. Why do you think that every oppressive society when it wants to impose its ideas on its people imprisons or stigmatizes independent thinkers and intellectuals?
2006-12-28 22:33:36
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answer #4
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answered by Antonio 2
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i'm attracted to the place you receive this statistic. thinking all the vital prayers a Muslim does in the day, inspite of ethnicity, are finished in Arabic. Even the statement of religion is declared in Arabic and frequently accompanied in the persons close by tongue. Arabic training are held at in simple terms approximately all Masjids in the western worldwide. As with regards to religions and maximum of humanity, persons will possibly no longer have the skill to envision or write yet whilst this is of their close by tongue then they are able to a minimum of comprehend. for people who can no longer examine the Quran in Arabic, the translations of which technique of the Quran are in simple terms approximately consistently side by employing fringe of the only arabic version of the Quran. So it could be common to ask somebody who's literate in the unique language as to what's declared. in assessment to the Christian bible it is not uncommon for the Quran to be completly memorized from the 1st actual letter to the final. As many have talked approximately, the Christian bible isn't in its unique languages and till these days many ought to no longer examine it even in translation. As for the Tanakh, till cutting-edge background Hebrew replaced into no longer a broadly studied or spoken language. Hebrew, like Koine Greek and Aramaic (different than for the Chaldeans in Iraq and Syria who nonetheless communicate a version of it) replaced into no longer spoken on a huge foundation. Hebrew replaced into revived in the the mid to late 1800s- early 1900s. Arabic maintains to be a residing language in part with the aid of actual shown fact that the Quran and Muslim faith is geared up around it. no count the place you're in the worldwide you will no longer enter a masjid (mosque) without listening to Arabic being spoken. regardless of if there are no longer any Arabs that are cutting-edge the prayers and recitation of the Quran are nonetheless finished in Arabic. The miracle of Muhammed (pbuh) is the Quran, a recitation from an Illiterate guy.
2016-10-06 04:01:10
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answer #5
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answered by lyon 4
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I have read the Koran, I found an old used copy of it at a yardsale, It was printed in 1923. I collect old books. I've read it cover to cover and found it very enlightening.
2006-12-28 22:25:32
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes I read the actual book. I bought it at a barnes and noble. BTW I think I answered one of your questions before about this. Hope the holidays are treating you well malus.
2006-12-28 22:55:25
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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I have the book at home, and I think it is very poetic in a lot of places. I'm still looking for those violent passages that everyone assumes are there. It reads pretty much like the Bible.
2006-12-28 22:23:59
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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I have three copies and do read it on occasions to pass the time.
2006-12-28 22:32:46
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answer #9
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answered by IRunWithScissors 3
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preparing yourself to be brain washed are you.fool.and no i haven't nor never will.I'm not in to slitting anI'mals throats im not in to stoning people who commit adultery I'm not in to beating my wife with a stick I'm not in to forcing my children to pray 5 tI'mes a day im not in to refusing to wash my hands with the solution provided by hospitals in this country to help stop the spread of Mrs because it contains alcohol and I'm not in to threatening to kill people who insult some profit by drawing little cartoons.the whole so called religion is a complete joke.so why would anybody in there right mind read such a book.
2006-12-28 22:40:56
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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No I haven't. But I intend too. Any suggestions on which print or version??
2006-12-28 22:29:56
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answer #11
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answered by Yvonne Mystic 4
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