IQNA

Late Qari Abdul Basit Remembered in Egyptian Quranic TV Program

20:08 - November 25, 2025
News ID: 3495520
IQNA – Late Abdul Basit Abdul Samad, a legendary qari of Egypt and the Islamic world, was honored in the Egyptian Dawlet El Telawa (State of Recitation) program.

Yasser Abdul Basit, the son of late Abdul Basit Abdul Samad, taking part in the Egyptian Dawlet El Telawa (State of Recitation) program.

 

The program, in its new episode on Saturday, honored the memory of Abdul Basit and his outstanding services and lasting efforts in spreading Egyptian recitation schools in the Arab and Islamic world.

It was attended by Yasser Abdul Basit, the son of the late qari, who expressed his gratitude and satisfaction for his father’s selection as one of the honorees in the program.

In its previous episodes, the program commemorated some other legendary qaris like Sheikh Mahmoud Khalil al-Husari and Sheikh Muhammad Rifaat, the qaris of the golden era of Egyptian recitation.

Dawlet El Telawa is currently regarded as Egypt’s largest talent search program in Quran recitation and Tajweed. Produced in cooperation with the Ministry of Awqaf and the United Media Services Company, it seeks to identify promising reciters from across the country.

Abdul Basit Abdul Samad is known as one of the greatest Quran reciters in the world.

He was born in 1927 in the village of Al-Maza’iza, south of Egypt. His grandfather was a pious man, a Quran expert and a memorizer of the Quran.

Read More:

At 10, Abdul Basit finished learning the entire Quran by heart in his village. He also learned 7 styles of Quran recitation by the age of 12 and the 10 styles by 14.

He started reciting the Quran in mosques and religious centers and soon became very popular.

In 1951, at the age of 19, he went to the capital Cairo for the first time and recited verses from the Quran at Magham Zeynab. Famous Quranic figures and reciters like Abdul Fattah Sha’shaie, Mustafa Esmaeel, Abdul-Azim Zaher, and Abolainain Shoaisha were present at the event. His performance was so outstanding that the crowd requested him to recite for longer than his allotted 10 minutes by his audience, and he continued to recite for over an hour and a half; his listeners were captured by his mastery of pitch, tone and the rules of Tajweed.

In the same year, he started reciting the Quran in Egypt’s national radio.

Abdul Basit travelled to many countries around the world for reciting the Quran. Once in Jakarta, Indonesia, over 250,000 people gathered in a mosque and streets around it to listen to his recitation.

In 1952 he made the Hajj pilgrimage and recited the Quran in the Masjid-al-Haram in Makkah and Masjid-un-Nabi in Medina.

Listening to his inspiring recitations of the Quran, many non-Muslims have embraced Islam, including 6 in Los Angeles and 164 in Uganda.

Master Abdul Basit Abdul Samad died of diabetes and liver disease in November 1988. Thousands of his fans attended his funeral. The funeral was also attended by ambassadors of Islamic countries in Cairo.

 

4319057

captcha