Lab brief L-02Knowledge & learningStatus — Research

QuranGPT.

A knowledge companion that turns fourteen centuries of Islamic scholarship into a clear, searchable, evidence-grounded experience.

Role — Architect & builderStack — RAG · knowledge graph · multilingual NLPStage — Research
§ 01The idea

Not a chatbot. A knowledge companion.

The sources of Islamic knowledge (the Qur'an, the Hadith corpus, classical commentary, biography, and history) are vast, multilingual, and scattered across incompatible formats. Understanding how a single idea developed can mean crossing centuries and a dozen disconnected texts.

QuranGPT brings those sources into one structured, navigable place, then layers AI reasoning on top so a reader can understand not just what the sources say, but how ideas developed, why they matter, and how they connect across time. It is built for everyone, from lifelong scholars to curious beginners.

The principle underneath it: every answer stays traceable to respected, named sources. Authenticity is the product, not an afterthought.

§ 02Why it matters

Clarity, authenticity, and connection.

§ 03What it offers

A unified gateway to the tradition.

Verse in context

Qur'an

Instant explanations, multilingual translations, and the context of each revelation.

Narrator networks

Hadith

Exploration of hadith literature, including narrator chains and cross-collection evidence.

A living timeline

History

Islamic history aligned with global events, archaeological findings, and scholarly research.

One gateway

Civilization

Law, theology, biography, ethics, science, and culture, connected in a single map.

Any depth

Assistant

An intelligent learning companion that explains from simple summary to scholarly-level analysis.

§ 04The vision
"Not a chatbot, not a search engine: a knowledge companion that brings clarity, depth, and authenticity to one of humanity's richest intellectual traditions."
The aim: Islamic scholarship, reimagined for the modern world
§ 05What I'm testing
Open questions

QuranGPT is an active experiment. The hard parts I'm working through: keeping every answer rigorously traceable to a named source rather than a paraphrase; rendering hadith narrator networks as something a researcher can actually navigate; holding scholarly trust across multiple languages and schools of thought; and earning the confidence of scholars, not just the convenience of beginners.

If you're an educator, researcher, or institution who cares about getting this right, I'd welcome the conversation.

Grounded in evidence. Open to everyone. Designed to inspire.

An exploratory prototype by Dr. Nabeel A. Khan.

Fin · Sheet 08