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Much has been written about the Holy Prophet Muhammad SAAW ever since the second or third generation of Muslims following the demise of the Holy Prophet in 632 A.D. Classical biographical works on the Holy Prophet Muhammad SAAW—often called the Sirah al-Nubuwwah or simply Sirah—have been seen as central and essential to both the history and historiography of Islam, and altogether an inextricable part of the Muslim faith. For Muslims, the Sunnah (Prophetic tradition), wherein a significant part of the Sirah resides, in fact occupies the second most pertinent source of Truth after the Holy Quran. More specifically, the qaul al-nabi (Prophetic sayings), contained in the huge compendium of the ahadist (codified form of Prophetic tradition), provide a rich and diverse way in which both Muslims and students of Islam could ‘reconnect’ with the Holy Prophet Muhammad SAAW, and understand more comprehensively the context and circumstances, which surround the early rise of Islam in the 7th century. This paper therefore seeks to analyze contemporary readings of the Sirah behind the rich, multiple interpretations of the Quran and the Prophetic tradition. It attempts to confront the problem of textuality, within the philosophical domain, and answer the question of how contemporary readers of the Sirah could contextualize the plentiful lessons based on its honorable worldview that sprung directly from the sacred life and holy teachings of the Prophet Muhammad SAAW.

Dicky Sofjan. (2020) Contemporary Reading of the Sirah: Textuality and Contextuality, AL-ILM Journal, Volume 4, Issue 2.
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