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…in effect Neuwirth has likely DENIED serious scholars access to this material for 20 years.
Angelika Neuwirth has given the impression the photographs taken in order to build up the "Koran Archiv" in Munich... were destroyed at the end of World War II. This impression is false, and thus it is an amazing fact that evidently no attempt has been made since to study the photographs!
It is clear that this sort of scholarship is risky. Anything challenging the legitimacy of various Koranic passages has political meaning, and risks the ire of fanatics. The Journal deadpans:the first "critical edition" of the Quran -- an attempt to divine what the original text looked like and to explore overlaps with the Bible and other Christian and Jewish literature.
Applying Western critical methods to Islam's holiest text is a sensitive test of the Muslim community's readiness to both accommodate and absorb thinking outside its own traditions
Keeping the manuscripts apparently out of the public domain and in the hands of what amount to German civil servants for decades, this may be a step forward from secrecy and lies, but it is very far from open scholarship.During the 19th century, Germans pioneered modern scholarship of ancient texts. Their work revolutionized understanding of Christian and Jewish scripture. It also infuriated some of the devout, who resented secular scrutiny of texts believed to contain sacred truths.