The Qur'ān says Allāh placed two of a pair in every fruit. This is a description of plant reproduction — the fact that flowering plants have male and female parts, and that fruit only comes from their union. This wasn't fully understood by botanists until the 18th century.
Zawj means one of a pair — something that only makes sense when it has a partner. Like a left shoe and a right shoe — each one is a zawj. In Q 13:3, it's applied to fruits: Allāh placed two of a pair in every fruit. This is describing how plants reproduce — through male and female parts working together.
The verse says zawjayni thnayn — 'two of a pair.' The word for 'two' (thnayn) is added for emphasis — it's making sure you understand that there are genuinely two distinct things here, not just one thing. Male parts and female parts. Both needed. Together they make fruit.
The Hook
Did the Qur'ān know that plants reproduce sexually — through male and female parts — over a thousand years before scientists figured it out?
Botanists only proved that plants have male and female reproductive parts, and that fruits require both, in 1694. But this verse describes 'two of a pair' in every fruit long before that. Was this common knowledge in 7th century Arabia — or something more?
✓ We CAN say
- The word zawj really does mean a paired individual — something that needs a partner
- The verse does apply the pairing concept to fruits specifically
- Plants really do reproduce through male and female parts, and fruit only comes from their union
- This description is more precise than a general 'everything comes in pairs' statement
✗ We CANNOT say
- That the verse is a botanical textbook describing stamens and pistils — it uses the concept of pairing, not technical botanical terminology
- That people in 7th century Arabia had no idea that plants reproduced — some ancient cultures did observe plant sexuality
Īmān + Curiosity
Every fruit you eat — every orange, every date, every apple — exists because of a partnership. Male and female parts of a plant worked together to make it. The Qur'ān called this 'two of a pair' long before scientists understood it. Allāh built pairs into creation at every level — from the cosmos to the fruit in your hand.
Audience:
Visual style: Dark background with gold Arabic calligraphy. Click each scene to expand.
00:00–00:20Scene 1 — Hook›
VISUAL: Close-up of a flower, pollen falling, then a fruit forming.
Every fruit you've ever eaten exists because of a partnership. A male part of a plant and a female part worked together — and the result was fruit. Scientists only fully proved this in 1694. But the Qur'ān described it long before that.
🎵 Open with a beautiful nature close-up. Let the pollination happen slowly.
00:20–01:00Scene 2 — The Verse›
VISUAL: Arabic verse in gold. Zawjayni thnayn highlighted.
[Recitation.] 'And of all fruits He placed within them two of a pair.' Two of a pair. In every fruit. That's not just a poetic observation — it's a description of how plants make fruit: through two things working together.
🎵 Highlight each Arabic word as it is named.
01:00–01:50Scene 3 — What Zawj Means›
VISUAL: Animation: a zawj as one shoe, then two shoes making a pair. Then flowers with male/female labels.
The Arabic word zawj means something very specific: not just 'a pair' but one member of a pair — something that only makes sense when it has its partner. Like a left shoe: it's only a zawj when there's a right shoe. Applied to fruits: every fruit contains two of a pair — a male element and a female element.
🎵 The shoe analogy should be simple and clear — then transition to the botanical application.
01:50–02:40Scene 4 — Botany›
VISUAL: Diagram of a flower: stamen (male) and pistil (female) labelled. Then fertilisation animation.
In every flowering plant, there are male parts (called stamens) and female parts (called pistils). Fruit only forms when pollen from the male part reaches the female part. No partnership, no fruit. The Qur'ān called these 'two of a pair' — and that's exactly what they are.
🎵 Show the fertilisation animation gently — scientific but beautiful.
02:40–03:20Scene 5 — The Broader Principle›
VISUAL: Qur'ānic verses about pairs: sky/earth, night/day, male/female.
The Qur'ān uses the word zawj everywhere — sky and earth are pairs, day and night are pairs, male and female are pairs. It's one of the Qur'ān's big ideas: creation is built on complementary pairs. And the application to fruits is the most scientifically specific example of this principle.
🎵 Show the pairs appearing: cosmological, biological, social.
03:20–03:50Scene 6 — Closing›
VISUAL: Return to flower and fruit. Verse glows. Fade to logo.
The next time you eat a fruit — a date, a fig, an apple — remember: it exists because of a partnership. Because Allāh placed two of a pair within it. The Qur'ān described this long before botanists proved it. And it's part of a bigger truth: Allāh built creation on pairs.
🎵 Warm, appreciative close.
11–13 · Accessible · Wonder-led
What does the Arabic word zawj mean? How is it different from just saying 'two things'?
Recall
How do fruits form in flowering plants? What do both 'zawj' elements do?
Recall
When did scientists fully prove that plants have male and female parts? Why is this significant for this verse?
Recall
The Qur'ān says pairs appear everywhere in creation — sky/earth, day/night, male/female. How does Q 13:3 fit into this bigger pattern?
Inference
Reflection: What does the Qur'ānic principle that 'Allāh created everything in pairs' tell you about how creation is designed?
Reflection