DoQuran is built on a simple belief: the Qur'an speaks to every generation, and every discipline has something valuable to hear in it.
Each day, the platform presents one verse — Arabic text and English translation — and invites contributors to share a brief reflection through the lens of their expertise: science, engineering, medicine, education, classical scholarship, or personal seeking.
Contributors tag their reflections with perspective sealsthat signal the angle they're writing from. The community votes on which readings are most helpful, and over time, contributors earn recognition through tiered levels — from Newcomer to Pillar — and per-seal ranks like Rising Scientist or Distinguished Scholar.
DoQuran is not a tafsir platform, not a fatwa service, and not a replacement for scholarly authority. It is a gathering place for thoughtful people who want to engage with the Qur'an without leaving their intellect at the door — and who believe that a cardiologist's reading of a verse about the heart, or an engineer's reading of a verse about structure, can complement (not replace) the classical tradition.
DoQuran began with a simple personal need: a place to write down my understanding of each verse of the Qur'an — and have it persist, be accessible, and be mine. Not scattered across notebooks or buried in chat threads, but structured, searchable, and always there when I needed it.
Then I realised that if I wanted this, others must too. And if those others happened to be physicians, engineers, data scientists, and teachers, their reflections — viewed through the lens of their expertise — would not only be valuable for them, but for anyone reading the same verse. That is how a personal journal became a community platform.
DoQuran is fully open source under the MIT License. The Qur'an is freely available to all humanity; a platform built around it should be open in the same spirit. Developers, designers, and contributors are welcome — see our GitHub repository.
Quranic Arabic text and English translation (Sahih International) are sourced from the Al Quran Cloud API. All community reflections are user-submitted and represent the views of their authors.