
Wisdom Lessons from Air and Wind
During an intellectual meditative journey into the word “Hû” — هُوَ in لَا إِلٰهَ إِلَّا هُوَ (There is no god by He) and قُلْ هُوَ اللّٰهُ (Say: He is Allah) and its meanings for the physical aspects of creation, I was contemplating the page of “air” when an exquisitely subtle point of tawḥīd (Divine Oneness) instantly manifested itself:
Indeed, just as a handful of soil that serves as a pot for a hundred flowers in succession, if attributed to nature and causes, would necessitate either that this small pot contains, on a miniature scale, a hundred — or perhaps as many as the flowers — invisible machines and factories; or that each particle of that tiny piece of soil possesses the knowledge to form all those different flowers, with their distinct properties and life-sustaining mechanisms, possessing endless knowledge and infinite power like a deity.
Likewise, each piece of air and wind, which serves as a throne for divine command and will, would require, within each fragment of wind, within each breath, within the tiny amount of air that forms the word “Hû” (هُوَ), the presence of miniature switchboards, receivers, and transmitters of all the telephones, telegraphs, radios, televisions, and all other types of communications that take place across the world, and be able to perform these endless tasks simultaneously and instantaneously.

Elif-Lâm-Mîm: Görsel Bir Tefsir (Turkish)
Kur’ân’da, Bakara dahil 6 surenin ilk ayeti olan Elif-Lâm-Mîm üzerine yazdığım görsel tefsirin en yeni versiyonunu şu link'ten indirebilirsiniz:

ABC’s of ISLAM: Introduction
ABC’s of ISLAM will publish a series of short and accessible posts that provide an introduction to the basics of Islam.
The target audience is someone who has little-to-no knowledge about Islam. The only background needed is a curious mind and an open heart.
Here is a brief list of topics this series plans to cover:
Who is God according to Islam?
What does He want from us? What does He promise in return?
What is the Quran, the Holy book of Islam?
Who wrote it? What does it contain? How does it differ from the Bible?
Why do some say it’s a miraculous book?
Why do some find it hard to understand?
Who is Muhammad?
What are his main teachings? What legacy did he leave behind?
Where/when did he live? What did he do or not do? Was he a warlord? Who did he marry and why?
What is Islam’s view of women? How do women’s rights in Islam compare to other cultures?
Is Islamcompatible with modern science? With democracy and freedom of choice?
What do Muslims think of Christians, Jews, Buddhists, Hindus, agnostics, atheists, and others?
What is Jihad? What does infidel mean? Why do we always seem to hear about Islam in the context of wars, terrorism, and such?
And many other similar questions…
Feel free to submit your own questions for future articles using the contact form at the bottom of the page.

What is the First Sentence of the Quran?
The Quran is the Divine Book of Islam, and Muslims believe that it is the Word of God, unaltered. And Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) said it will remain “his greatest miracle until the end of time.”
Clearly, these are bold claims, and a non-Muslim has every right to be skeptical about their truth. I will discuss these claims and the evidence put forward in detail in future posts.
For now though, what matters is that regardless of whether you believe this or not, these statements reflect how Muslims view the Quran.So, if you want to know what Islam is — as understood by Muslims — you start with the Quran.
First: A unique feature of the Quran is its hierarchical structure: that all the (600-page!) Quran is summarized in its first Chapter (1/3-page long!), and that the first chapter is summarized in the first Sentence.
(You may notice that this is precisely the format of modern scientific articles: “Article summarized in Introduction summarized in Abstract”, which I find pretty remarkable for a book that goes back 1500 years.)
So,what does that first sentence say? Here it is: