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It is not plagerism to mimick the bismillah formula!
How is it not? This is not found in any other scripture, at the start of every chapter.
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I shall ask you;
Can you show me any other book that uses repeated verses like Surah 55 in the Qur'an?
I never claimed that was unique! That is a common thing called a 'refrain'. And the Qur'an only uses it in a few places. That is COMPELTELY different from taking an EXACT phrase and style of the Qur'an and just changing a few adjectives!
And it seems that you forgot what I showed you!
Let's look at the verses again. The Qur'anic verses followed by yours.
Al-Baqarah begins with:
In the name of Allah, the Most Merciful, Most Compassionate
All you did was change ONE word:
In the name of The Living, The Merciful, The Compassionate
Al-Baqarah then has some symbolic letters:
1. Alif-Lâm-Mîm. [These letters are one of the miracles of the Qur'ân and none but Allâh (Alone) knows their meanings].
You decide to copy that style too:
Yaa Haa Waa Haa (The meaning of these has not been disclosed)
Al-Baqarah then says:
2. This is the Book (the Qur'ân), whereof there is no doubt, a guidance to the righteous.
You change only three words:
This is the Surah in which there is no innovating, a guidance for the believers
Even a moron can see that you have just taken a chapter and modified it.
There is no comparison between that and using a refrain, which is a common feature of many forms of poetry!!
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You have a choice!
I plagerised the Qur'an, and the Qur'an plagerised the Bible...
or the Qur'an did not plagerise the Bible and I did not plagerise the Qur'an.
Sorry pal, but using a refrain is found in many forms of poetry. Nice try though.
You yourself, have ADMITTED to using Baqarah as a model for your chapter.
It matches up with Al-Baqarah, almost word for word, as I have just shown.
But this is not my major point.....