Al-Fajr
The Dawn · 30 ayahs
Themes & purpose (show)
Themes and purpose:
This Meccan surah affirms the certainty of the Resurrection and Judgment. Its primary purpose is to refute the false assumption that worldly wealth or poverty is a sign of divine honor or degradation. It achieves this by citing the historical destruction of powerful nations and concludes with a vivid depiction of the Day of Judgment and the eternal bliss of the satisfied soul.
Context of Revelation:
Era: Meccan by consensus.
Context: The surah was revealed during the early Meccan period to counter the polytheists' arrogance and their social philosophy that wealth signified divine approval, while poverty signified divine disgrace.
Chronology: It is counted as the tenth surah in the order of revelation, revealed after Sūrat al-Layl and before al-Ḍuḥā.
Name and Ayah Count:
Name: The surah is known as "Sūrat al-Fajr" (The Dawn), and sometimes as "Sūrat al-Fajr wa-layālin ʿashr" (The Dawn and Ten Nights), due to its opening.
Ayah Count: 32 ayahs (Madinah/Makkah) or 30/29 (Kūfah/Baṣrah).
Surah Overview:
- Historical Warning: Citing the destruction of ʿĀd, Thamūd, and Pharaoh as a powerful precedent for the punishment awaiting the Makkans. Consoling the Prophet (ﷺ) and promising the eventual defeat of his enemies. [6-14]
- Refuting False Honor: Invalidating the belief that Allah honors a person through wealth and disgraces them through poverty. Condemning the polytheists for failing to give charity, neglecting the orphan, and not feeding the poor. [15-20]
- Repentance: Warning the deniers that on that day, no amount of wealth or belated repentance will be accepted. [24-26]
- The Final Reward: Describing the welcoming of the satisfied soul into the Garden of Paradise. [27-30]
Grammar and morphology data based on the Quranic Arabic Corpus. Source: corpus.quran.com. Copyright Kais Dukes.

