Al-Mujādilah (, She who disputed or "She Who Disputes, The Pleading Woman") is the 58th chapter (sūrah) of the Qur'an with 22 verses (ayat). Revealed in Medina, the chapter first addresses the legality of pre-Islamic method of divorce called zihar. The name "she who disputes" refers to the woman who petitioned Muhammad about the unjustness of this method, and the chapter's first verses outlaw it and prescribe how to deal with past cases of zihar. The chapter also discusses public assemblies and prescribes manners associated with it. The chapter ends by contrasting what it calls "the confederat
Al-Mujādilah is the 58th chapter of the Qur'an, revealed in Medina, and takes its name from a woman who disputed with the Prophet Muhammad about an unfair pre-Islamic divorce practice called zihar. The chapter addresses the legality of this practice, establishes rules for public assemblies, and outlines proper conduct in religious and social settings.
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Al-Mujādilah (, She who disputed or "She Who Disputes, The Pleading Woman") is the 58th chapter (sūrah) of the Qur'an with 22 verses (ayat). Revealed in Medina, the chapter first addresses the legality of pre-Islamic method of divorce called zihar. The name "she who disputes" refers to the woman who petitioned Muhammad about the unjustness of this method, and the chapter's first verses outlaw it and prescribe how to deal with past cases of zihar. The chapter also discusses public assemblies and prescribes manners associated with it. The chapter ends by contrasting what it calls "the confederates of God" and "the confederates of Satan", and promising rewards for the former.
This surah is known for having the word "Allah" in all 22 of its verses.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).