| In the Name of Allah, the Most
        Compassionate, the Most Merciful A Scientist's Interpretation of References to Embryology in the
        Qur'anKeith L. Moore, Ph.D., F.I.A.C. Address all correspondence to:Keith L. Moore, Ph.D, F.I.A.C., Professor of Anatomy and Associate Dean
        Basic Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto,
        Ontario M55 IAB, Canada.
 
 Statements referring to human reproduction and development are
        scattered throughout the Qur'an. It is only recently that the scientific
        meaning of some of these verses has been appreciated fully. The long
        delay in interpreting these verses correctly resulted mainly from
        inaccurate translations and commentaries and from a lack of awareness of
        scientific knowledge. Interest in explanations of the verses of the Qur'an is not new.
        People used to ask the prophet Muhammad all sorts of questions about the
        meaning of verses referring to human reproduction. The Apostle's answers
        form the basis of the Hadith literature. The translations of the verses from the Qur'an which are interpreted
        in this paper were provided by Sheik Abdul Majid Zendani, a Professor of
        Islamic Studies in King Abdulaziz University in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. 
          "He makes you in the wombs of your mothers in stages, one
            after another, in three veils of darkness." This statement is from Sura 39:6. We do not know when it was realized
        that human beings underwent development in the uterus (womb), but the
        first known illustration of a fetus in the uterus was drawn by Leonardo
        da Vinci in the 15th century. In the 2nd century A.D., Galen described
        the placenta and fetal membranes in his book "On The Formation
        of the Foetus." Consequently, doctors in the 7th century A.D.
        likely knew that the human embryo developed in the uterus. It is
        unlikely that they knew that it developed in stages, even though
        Aristotle had described the stages of development of the chick embryo in
        the 4th century B.C. The realization that the human embryo develops in
        stages was not discussed and illustrated until the 15th century. After the microscope was discovered in the 17th century by
        Leeuwenhoek descriptions were made of the early stages of the chick
        embryo. The staging of human embryos was not described until the 20th
        century. Streeter (1941) developed the first system of staging which has
        now been replaced by a more accurate system proposed by O'Rahilly
        (1972). "The three veils of darkness" may refer to: (l) the
        anterior abdominal wall; (2) the uterine wall; and (3) the
        amniochorionic membrane (Fig. 1). Although there are other
        interpretations of this statement, the one presented here seems the most
        logical from an embryological point of view. 
          
            
              |  | Figure 1. Drawing of a sagittal section of a
                female's abdomen and pelvis showing a fetus in utero. The
                "veils of darkness" are: (1) the anterior abdominal
                wall; (2) the uterine wall, and (3) the amniochorionic membrane. |  
          "Then We placed him as a drop in a place of rest." This statement is from Sura 23:13. The drop or nutfah has been
        interpreted as the sperm or spermatozoon, but a more meaningful
        interpretation would be the zygote which divides to form a blastocyst
        which is implanted in the uterus ("a place of rest"). This
        interpretation is supported by another verse in the Qur'an which states
        that "a human being is created from a mixed drop." The zygote
        forms by the union of a mixture of the sperm and the ovum ("The
        mixed drop"). 
          "Then We made the drop into a leech-like structure." This statement is from Sura 23:14. The word "alaqah" refers
        to a leech or bloodsucker. This is an appropriate description of the
        human embryo from days 7-24 when it clings to the endometrium of the
        uterus, in the same way that a leech clings to the skin. Just as the
        leech derives blood from the host, the human embryo derives blood from
        the decidua or pregnant endometrium. It is remarkable how much the
        embryo of 23-24 days resembles a leech (Fig. 2). As there were no
        microscopes or lenses available in the 7th century, doctors would not
        have known that the human embryo had this leech-like appearance. In the
        early part of the fourth week, the embryo is just visible to the unaided
        eye because it is smaller than a kernel of wheat. 
          
            
              |  | Figure 2. Top, a drawing of a leech or bloodsucker.
 Below, a drawing of a 24 day-old human embryo.
 Note the leech-like appearance of the human embryo at this
                stage.
 |  
          "Then of that leech-like structure, We made a chewed
            lump." This statement is also from Sura 23:14. The Arabic word
        "mudghah" means "chewed substance or chewed lump."
        Toward the end of the fourth week, the human embryo looks somewhat like
        a chewed lump of flesh (Fig. 3). The chewed appearance results from the
        somites which resemble teeth marks. The somites represent the beginnings
        or primordia of the vertebrae. 
          
            
              |  | Figure 3. Left, a plasticine model of the human embryo which has
                the appearance of chewed flesh.
 Right, a drawing of a 28 day-old human embryo showing
                several bead-like somites which resemble the teeth marks in the
                model shown to the left.
 |  
          "Then We made out of the chewed lump, bones, and clothed
            the bones in flesh." This continuation of Sura 23:14 indicates that out of the chewed lump
        stage, bones and muscles form. This is in accordance with embryological
        development. First the bones form as cartilage models and then the
        muscles (flesh) develop around them from the somatic mesoderm. 
          "Then We developed out of it another creature." This next part of Sura 23:14 implies that the bones and muscles
        result in the formation of another creature. This may refer to the
        human-like embryo that forms by the end of the eighth week. At this
        stage it has distinctive human characteristics and possesses the
        primordia of all the internal and external organs and parts. After the
        eighth week, the human embryo is called a fetus. This may be the new
        creature to which the verse refers. 
          "And He gave you hearing and sight and feeling and
            understanding." This part of Sura 32:9 indicates that the special senses of hearing,
        seeing, and feeling develop in this order, which is true. The primordia
        of the internal ears appear before the beginning of the eyes, and the
        brain (the site of understanding) differentiates last. 
          "Then out of a piece of chewed flesh, partly formed and
            partly unformed." This part of Sura 22:5 seems to indicate that the embryo is composed
        of both differentiated and undifferentiated tissues. For example, when
        the cartilage bones are differentiated, the embryonic connective tissue
        or mesenchyme around them is undifferentiated. It later differentiates
        into the muscles and ligaments attached to the bones. 
          "And We cause whom We will to rest in the wombs for an
            appointed term." This next part of Sura 22:5 seems to imply that God determines which
        embryos will remain in the uterus until full term. It is well known that
        many embryos abort during the first month of development, and that only
        about 30% of zygotes that form, develop into fetuses that survive until
        birth. This verse has also been interpreted to mean that God determines
        whether the embryo will develop into a boy or girl. The interpretation of the verses in the Qur'an referring to human
        development would not have been possible in the 7th century A.D., or
        even a hundred years ago. We can interpret them now because the science
        of modern Embryology affords us new understanding. Undoubtedly there are
        other verses in the Qur'an related to human development that will be
        understood in the future as our knowledge increases.   |