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Lesson 4: Surah Al-Nas

Unit 6 · Lesson 4
سُورَةُ النَّاس

Surah Al-Nas

Mankind — Seeking Refuge from the Whisperer Within

📖 6 Verses
📍 Makki Surah
✨ Surah #114 — Last Surah
🛡️ Al-Muʿawwidhatain
🔊 Audio: Al-Husary Al-Muallim

Al-Nas is the final Surah of the Quran — the last of Allah's words to humanity. Together with Al-Falaq, it completes the shield of protection. Al-Falaq guards against external evil. Al-Nas guards against the internal enemy: the whispering that enters the heart.

You will notice one word repeated 5 times in 6 versesالنَّاسِ (mankind). This Surah speaks directly to every human being.

Did You Know?

Al-Nas was the last Surah to be revealed, making it the final message Allah sent to the Prophet ﷺ before the completion of the Quran. The Quran ends exactly where it needs to — reminding us of our greatest enemy: the whisper within.

The word الْوَسْوَاسُ الْخَنَّاسُ (Al-Waswās Al-Khannās) describes Shaytan perfectly: he whispers doubt and evil into the heart — and then retreats (الْخَنَّاسُ = the retreater) the moment a person remembers Allah. This is why Dhikr (remembrance of Allah) is the most powerful weapon against him.

📌 The 3+3 Structure of Al-Nas

Al-Nas has a perfect two-part structure. The first three verses describe who Allah is. The last three describe what we are seeking protection from.

🕌 Verses 1–3: Three Names of Allah

رَبِّ النَّاسِLord / Sustainer of mankind
مَلِكِ النَّاسِKing / Sovereign of mankind
إِلَٰهِ النَّاسِGod / Deity of mankind

🛡️ Verses 4–6: Three Aspects of the Enemy

الْوَسْوَاسِHe whispers
الْخَنَّاسِHe retreats when Allah is remembered
مِنَ الْجِنَّةِ وَالنَّاسِFrom both jinn and humans

📌 Verse Overview

#VerseThemeKey Tajweed
1 قُلْ أَعُوذُ بِرَبِّ النَّاسِ Seek refuge with the Lord of mankind Madd al-Waw · Shaddah · Lam Shamsiyya
2 مَلِكِ النَّاسِ The King of mankind Lam Shamsiyya · Shaddah
3 إِلَٰهِ النَّاسِ The God of mankind Madd Alef · Lam Shamsiyya
4 مِن شَرِّ الْوَسْوَاسِ الْخَنَّاسِ The evil of the retreating whisperer Ikhfaa · Madd Alef × 2 · Shaddah
5 الَّذِي يُوَسْوِسُ فِي صُدُورِ النَّاسِ Who whispers into the chests of mankind Shaddah · Madd Waw · Lam Shamsiyya
6 مِنَ الْجِنَّةِ وَالنَّاسِ From among jinn and mankind Lam Qamariyya · Shaddah · Lam Shamsiyya
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Verse 1
قُلْ أَعُوذُ بِرَبِّ النَّاسِ
Qul aʿūdhu bi-rabbi n-nās
"Say: I seek refuge with the Lord of mankind"
Tap to Listen

🔤 Word by Word

#ArabicTransliterationMeaningNote
1قُلْ qul Say! Same opening as Al-Ikhlas and Al-Falaq — Lam Saakina
2أَعُوذُ aʿūdhu I seek refuge Madd al-Waw (ū = 2 counts) — same as Al-Falaq
3بِرَبِّ bi-rabbi with the Lord of Ba has Shaddah ّ — hold "rab-bi" for 2 counts
4النَّاسِ an-nās mankind / people Lam Shamsiyya (ن = sun letter) · Nun has Shaddah · Alef Madd (ā)
📖 Full Translation

"Say: I seek refuge with the Lord of mankind."

🎯 Tajweed in this Verse

Lam Shamsiyya in النَّاسِ: Nun (ن) is a sun letter — the Lam is silent and the Nun takes Shaddah. Say "an-nās". This same word النَّاسِ appears 5 times in this Surah. The same rule applies every time.

Alef Madd in النَّاسِ: The Alef after Shaddah-Nun (نَّا) is a Madd — stretch the "ā" for 2 counts: "an-nāsi".

Connection to Al-Falaq: Verse 1 of Al-Nas is almost identical to Verse 1 of Al-Falaq (قُلْ أَعُوذُ بِرَبِّ…). The difference is the object: Al-Falaq (the daybreak) vs An-Nās (mankind). Both are from Allah — we seek refuge with the Lord of both.

٢ — ٣
٢
Verse 2
مَلِكِ النَّاسِ
Maliki n-nās
"The King of mankind"
Tap to Listen
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Verse 3
إِلَٰهِ النَّاسِ
Ilāhi n-nās
"The God of mankind"
Tap to Listen

🔤 Word by Word — Verses 2 & 3

#ArabicTransliterationMeaningNote
V2مَلِكِ maliki King / Sovereign Short vowels only — no Madd · from root م-ل-ك (power, ownership)
V2النَّاسِ an-nās of mankind Lam Shamsiyya · Shaddah on Nun · Alef Madd (2nd time)
V3إِلَٰهِ ilāhi God / Deity — the one worthy of worship Alef Madd on the ā (إِلَاهِ) — stretch for 2 counts
V3النَّاسِ an-nās of mankind Lam Shamsiyya again (3rd occurrence in Surah)
📖 Full Translation

Verse 2: "The King of mankind."  |  Verse 3: "The God of mankind."

Three Names — Complete Authority

Verses 1–3 present Allah through three complete dimensions of authority over mankind:

رَبّ (Rabb) — The Sustainer and Nurturer. He maintains and takes care of us every moment.

مَلِك (Malik) — The King and Sovereign. All power belongs to Him — no ruler on earth has true power except through His permission.

إِلَاه (Ilāh) — The God deserving of worship. He is the only One who deserves our hearts, prayers, and submission.

By presenting all three, the Surah establishes: the One you are seeking refuge with has complete and total authority over everything — including the whisperer you fear.

🎯 Tajweed in Verses 2 & 3

النَّاسِ — same rule, every time: In verses 2 and 3 (as in verse 1), النَّاسِ follows the same Lam Shamsiyya rule. By now you should feel it naturally — "an-nās", not "al-nās".

مَلِكِ — no Madd: Notice that مَلِكِ has only short vowels (Fatha, Kasra, Kasra). No stretching — say it quickly and clearly: "ma-li-ki".

إِلَٰهِ — Alef Madd: The Alef in إِلَٰهِ carries a Madd symbol. Stretch the "ā": "i-lā-hi".

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Verse 4
مِن شَرِّ الْوَسْوَاسِ الْخَنَّاسِ
Min sharri l-waswāsi l-khannās
"From the evil of the retreating whisperer"
Tap to Listen

🔤 Word by Word

#ArabicTransliterationMeaningNote
1مِن min from Noon Saakina before شَرِّ → Ikhfaa (same as Al-Falaq)
2شَرِّ sharri the evil of Ra has Shaddah ّ
3الْوَسْوَاسِ al-waswāsi the whisperer / the one who whispers Lam Qamariyya (و = moon letter) · Alef Madd (ā = 2 counts)
4الْخَنَّاسِ al-khannāsi the retreater — who withdraws when Allah is remembered Lam Qamariyya (خ = moon letter) · Nun has Shaddah · Alef Madd (ā)
📖 Full Translation

"From the evil of the retreating whisperer."

الْوَسْوَاسُ الْخَنَّاسُ — The Whisperer Who Retreats

الْوَسْوَاسُ literally means "the one who whispers repeatedly" — the word itself sounds like a whisper. It refers to Shaytan's method: subtle, quiet, persistent suggestions in the heart — not loud commands.

الْخَنَّاسُ means "the one who retreats and hides." When you say Bismillah or remember Allah — Shaytan retreats. When you forget — he returns. This is his nature. The Quran names this pattern precisely so we can recognize and counter it.

🎯 Tajweed in this Verse

Ikhfaa in مِن شَرِّ: Noon Saakina before ش = Ikhfaa (hidden nasal Noon). You learned this in Al-Falaq — same rule here.

Two Madds in one verse: الْوَسْوَاسِ has Alef Madd on "wā" · الْخَنَّاسِ has Alef Madd on "nā". Both are stretched 2 counts. Say slowly: "al-was-wāsi l-khan-nāsi".

Shaddah on Nun in الْخَنَّاسِ: The Nun doubles — say "khan-nās" with weight on the doubled Nun.

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Verse 5
الَّذِي يُوَسْوِسُ فِي صُدُورِ النَّاسِ
Alladhī yuwaswisu fī ṣudūri n-nās
"Who whispers into the chests of mankind"
Tap to Listen

🔤 Word by Word

#ArabicTransliterationMeaningNote
1الَّذِي alladhī who / the one who Lam has Shaddah ّ · Ya Madd (ī = 2 counts)
2يُوَسْوِسُ yuwaswisu whispers / keeps whispering The sound of the word mimics a whisper — say it softly
3فِي into / within Ya Madd (ī = 2 counts)
4صُدُورِ ṣudūri the chests / hearts Waw Madd (ū = 2 counts) · Sad is emphatic — vowels sound deeper
5النَّاسِ an-nās of mankind Lam Shamsiyya (5th time in Surah) — "an-nās" as always
📖 Full Translation

"Who whispers into the chests of mankind."

🎯 Tajweed in this Verse

يُوَسْوِسُ — notice the sound: This word literally sounds like what it means. The repeated Waw and Seen create a soft, sibilant whisper sound. When reciting, the word itself feels like a whisper. Say it gently: "yu-was-wi-su".

صُدُورِ — Sad + Madd al-Waw: The Sad (ص) is an emphatic letter — it darkens nearby vowels. Then the Waw Madd (ū) stretches for 2 counts. Say: "ṣu-dūri" with a deeper, fuller "u" due to the Sad.

النَّاسِ for the 4th time: You should now say this automatically — "an-nās". The Lam is silent, Nun doubled, Alef stretched.

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Verse 6 — Last Verse of the Quran
مِنَ الْجِنَّةِ وَالنَّاسِ
Mina l-jinnati wa-n-nās
"From among the jinn and mankind"
Tap to Listen

🔤 Word by Word

#ArabicTransliterationMeaningNote
1مِنَ mina from (among) Noon has a Fatha here (مِنَ) — no Tajweed rule for Noon · connects smoothly to next word
2الْجِنَّةِ al-jinnati the jinn / the unseen beings Lam Qamariyya (ج = moon letter) · Nun has Shaddah ّ
3وَالنَّاسِ wa-n-nāsi and mankind Lam Shamsiyya (5th and final time) · Alef Madd · Waqf — end of Surah and Quran
📖 Full Translation

"From among the jinn and mankind."

The Last Words of the Quran

وَالنَّاسِ — "and mankind" — are the final two words of the entire Quran. The Quran begins with بِسْمِ اللَّهِ (In the name of Allah) and ends with وَالنَّاسِ (and mankind). From Allah's name — to humanity. The whole Quran is a message from God, to people.

Verse 6 also reveals something important: the whisperer (الْوَسْوَاسُ الْخَنَّاسُ) is not only Shaytan from the jinn — it also includes human beings who whisper evil, spread doubt, and mislead others. We seek refuge from both.

🎯 Tajweed in this Verse

مِنَ — different from مِن: Here the Noon has a Fatha (مِنَ) rather than Sukoon (مِنْ). This happens before the Alef Wasl of الـ. There is no Noon Saakina rule — the Noon is simply connected to the next word.

الْجِنَّةِ — Lam Qamariyya: Jim (ج) is a moon letter. The Lam is clearly pronounced: "al-jinnati". The Nun then carries a Shaddah.

Final Waqf — وَالنَّاسِ: At the end of the Surah (and the entire Quran), stop on وَالنَّاسِ. Drop the Kasra ending and pause: "wa-n-nās" — a clean, peaceful stop.

🕌 The Complete Surah — Recite Together

Read Al-Nas as a whole. Tap any verse, or hear the full Surah by Al-Husary Al-Muallim.

سُورَةُ النَّاس — Surah Al-Nas
١
قُلْ أَعُوذُ بِرَبِّ النَّاسِ
Say: I seek refuge with the Lord of mankind
٢
مَلِكِ النَّاسِ
The King of mankind
٣
إِلَٰهِ النَّاسِ
The God of mankind
٤
مِن شَرِّ الْوَسْوَاسِ الْخَنَّاسِ
From the evil of the retreating whisperer
٥
الَّذِي يُوَسْوِسُ فِي صُدُورِ النَّاسِ
Who whispers into the chests of mankind
٦
مِنَ الْجِنَّةِ وَالنَّاسِ
From among the jinn and mankind

📋 Tajweed Rules in Al-Nas

#RuleWhere in Al-NasHow to ApplyVerse
1 Lam Shamsiyya النَّاسِ × 5 Nun is a sun letter — Lam silent, Nun takes Shaddah. Say "an-nās". 1, 2, 3, 5, 6
2 Shaddah ّ بِرَبِّ · النَّاسِ · الْخَنَّاسِ · الَّذِي · الْجِنَّةِ Double the letter — hold for 2 counts each 1–6
3 Madd al-Waw (ū) أَعُوذُ · صُدُورِ Waw after Damma — stretch "ū" for 2 counts 1, 5
4 Madd Alef (ā) النَّاسِ · إِلَٰهِ · الْوَسْوَاسِ · الْخَنَّاسِ Alef after Fatha — stretch "ā" for 2 counts 1–6
5 Ikhfaa مِن شَرِّ Noon Saakina before ش — nasal hidden Noon 4
6 Lam Qamariyya الْوَسْوَاسِ · الْخَنَّاسِ · الْجِنَّةِ Moon letters (و، خ، ج) — Lam is clearly pronounced 4, 6
7 Madd al-Ya (ī) الَّذِي · فِي Ya after Kasra — stretch "ī" for 2 counts 5
Al-Falaq vs Al-Nas — The Complete Shield

Al-Falaq seeks protection from external evil — the darkness of night, witchcraft, and the envy of others. These are harms that come from outside.

Al-Nas seeks protection from internal evil — the whispers that enter the heart and mind. These are harms that come from within.

Together, they cover every dimension of harm. This is why the Prophet ﷺ said: "Nothing can protect like the Muʿawwidhatain." Read them every morning, every evening, and before sleep. They are now yours — you can recite them in Arabic.

✅ Practice Quiz — Surah Al-Nas

📝

Test Your Understanding

Question 1 of 6 — النَّاسِ appears how many times in Surah Al-Nas?
A
3 times
B
4 times
C
5 times
D
6 times
Question 2 of 6 — What does الْخَنَّاسِ mean?
الْخَنَّاسِ 🔊
A
The one who shouts loudly
B
The one who whispers
C
The one who retreats — hides when Allah is remembered
D
The darkness of night
Question 3 of 6 — Verses 1–3 mention three names of Allah. Which of these is NOT one of them?
A
رَبّ — Lord / Sustainer
B
مَلِك — King
C
إِلَاه — God
D
صَمَد — Eternal Refuge
Question 4 of 6 — What Tajweed rule applies to النَّاسِ every time it appears?
النَّاسِ 🔊
A
Lam Qamariyya — the Lam is clearly pronounced
B
Lam Shamsiyya — the Nun is a sun letter, Lam is silent
C
Idghaam — letters merge together
D
Ikhfaa — the Nun is hidden
Question 5 of 6 — According to Verse 6, the whisperer can be from…
A
Only jinn
B
Only human beings
C
Both jinn and human beings
D
Animals and nature
Question 6 of 6 — Al-Nas protects from internal evil. Al-Falaq protects from…
A
Internal evil — whispers of the heart
B
External evil — darkness, witchcraft, and envy
C
Evil from jinn only
D
The Day of Judgment
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Quiz Complete — Surah Al-Nas
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