۴ اردیبهشت ۱۴۰۳ |۱۴ شوال ۱۴۴۵ | Apr 23, 2024
News ID: 342759
25 June 2016 - 12:47
braille Koran for Muslims

Malaysia's Muslim Association of Visually Impaired People is printing braille versions of the Quran, with each copy taking four hours to print.

Hawzah News Agency-Malaysia's Muslim Association of Visually Impaired People is printing braille version of the Quran, with each copy taking four hours to print.

As the fourth week of the holy month of Ramadan approaches, copies of the Quran printed in braille means that the blind Muslims in Malaysia don't have to lose out on reading their holy book.

Printed by the Malaysia Muslim Association of Visually Impaired People (PERTIM), the braille books are printed off at the organization's office in Kuala Lumpur and sent out to people's homes.

One copy of the braille QUran, which is thousands of pages long, sells for $US48 ($A64) on double-sided paper, and $US97 ($A130) on single-sided.

Printing off the entire holy book - with the center's five braille printers working simultaneously - reportedly takes about four hours.

Though some people read the braille Quran at the PERTIM center, most choose to have it delivered to their homes.

Ramadan is a particularly busy time for PERTIM, and large Malaysian companies donate money to the center so it can print more Qurans as part of the Islamic alms-giving tradition, known as Zakat in Arabic.

PERTIM was founded in 1996 and is the only organization permitted by the Malaysian government to print the Quran in braille.

 

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