Sūra Ṭāhā (Arabic: سورة طه) is the twentieth Sura and a Makki Sura of the Qur'an, located in the sixteenth juz' thereof. It is called "Taha" because it opens with the disjoined letters of "ta" and "ha." The themes of the sura include the communication of the revelation to people by the Prophet (s) without troubling himself, the command to moderateness in everything even prayers and worships, the story of Adam (a) and his fall from the Heaven, and the story of Moses (a).
As to the virtues of reciting the sura, the Prophet (s) is quoted as saying that if a person recites Sura Taha, God will give him the rewards of all Muhajirun and Ansar in the day of resurrection.
This Surah Taha is recited by Abdul Basit, Mohamed Siddiq El-Minshawi, Abu Bakr al-Shatri and Saad al-Ghamdi, in their beautiful voices.
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