Al-Soussi Recitation-تلاوة السوسي

The recitation of Abū ‘Amr ibn al-‘Alā’ al-Baṣrī (d. 154 AH) as transmitted by his student al-Sūsī (d. 261 AH) represents the complementary second transmission (ṭarīq) of this canonical Basran reading. While less widespread than al-Dūrī’s version, al-Sūsī’s transmission preserves equally authentic variations that offer unique insights into early Quranic phonology.


Historical Context & Transmission

  1. Key Figures

    • Abū ‘Amr ibn al-‘Alā’: Leading Basran reciter among the Seven

    • Al-Sūsī (full name: Abū Shu’ayb Ṣāliḥ ibn Ziyād al-Sūsī)

    • Transmission chain: Prophet (ﷺ) → Ubayy ibn Ka’b → Abū al-‘Āliya → Abū ‘Amr → al-Sūsī

  2. Geographical Spread

    • Historical centers: Basra, Susa (Persia), Baghdad

    • Current preservation: Scholarly circles in Yemen

    • Influence on: Early Persian Quranic traditions


Distinctive Phonological Features

1. Vowel System

  • Moderate imālah: Less pronounced than al-Dūrī’s version

  • Madd al-lāzim: Standard 6-count elongation

  • Pausal forms: 34 documented unique stopping rules

2. Consonant Treatment

  • Hamza retention: More consistent than al-Dūrī

  • Idghām ṣaghīr: Limited consonant assimilation

  • Qāf articulation: Lighter than al-Dūrī’s version

3. Textual Variations

  • 76 documented word-level differences from Hafs

  • Notable examples:

    • Surah Al-Fātiḥah 1:4: “Maliki yawmi d-dīn” (vs al-Dūrī’s “Māliki”)

    • Surah Al-Baqarah 2:19: “Wa-zulzilū” (consistent with al-Dūrī)

    • Surah Al-Mu’minūn 23:1: “Qad aflaḥa” with extended madd


Comparative Analysis

FeatureAl-SūsīAl-DūrīModern Hafs
ImālahModerateStrongNone
HamzaRetainedLightFull
MaddStandardContextualFixed
Text Variants7689
Current UsageAcademicSudan/YemenGlobal

Modern Preservation

  1. Academic Study

    • Specialized courses at Al-Azhar

    • Research focus at Umm al-Qura University

    • Included in Yemeni scholarly curricula

  2. Audio Resources

    • Rare Yemeni reciter recordings

    • The Ten Qirā’āt Project archives

    • King Fahd Complex research materials

  3. Manuscript Evidence

    • Early Persian Quranic fragments

    • Baghdad school manuscripts

    • References in Andalusian recitation manuals


Why Al-Sūsī’s Transmission Matters

  1. Textual Verification

    • Confirms Abū ‘Amr’s reading through dual transmission

    • Provides control for variant authentication

    • Documents natural recitation diversity

  2. Linguistic Significance

    • Shows Persian-influenced adaptations

    • Preserves Basran-Kufan transitional features

    • Illustrates teacher-student variation

  3. Historical Value

    • Maintains 12-century unbroken chain

    • Connects to early Abbasid scholarship

    • Represents eastern Islamic traditions


How to Access This Recitation

  1. For Students

    • Begin with al-Shatibiyyah and al-Durrah poems

    • Study under Yemeni qirā’āt specialists

    • Compare Surah Al-Raḥmān across transmissions

  2. For Researchers

    • Examine Persian manuscript collections

    • Analyze acoustic features in recordings

    • Study Abbasid-era biographical literature

  3. Digital Tools

    • Tanzil.net text comparison

    • Maqra.org academic platform

    • Quranic Audio Archive collections


Conclusion

Al-Sūsī’s transmission:

  • Completes the authentic picture of Abū ‘Amr’s recitation

  • Serves as crucial verification of Basran readings

  • Preserves valuable transitional linguistic features