Taiwan has completed a manuscript of the holy Qur’an from 16th century presented to Buddhist leader back in 2020.
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The handwritten worn down copy was presented to Master Cheng Yen, founder of the Taiwan-based Buddhist Tzu Chi Charity Foundation, as a gift in 2020 by Faisal Hu, a Tzu Chi volunteer and Muslim based in Turkey.
However, Cheng Yen found cigarette beetles -- a kind of bug commonly found in old books -- in the manuscript and turned to National Taiwan Library for help via Hu and another volunteer Wu Ying-mei, who was deputy director of the library at the time, the library said.
The restoration took 35 months, including a pause of about one and a half years due to the COVID-19 pandemic, before Hu, library director Tsao Tsui-ying and restorers at the library's Book Hospital presented the restored work to Cheng Yen in Hualien on Monday.
This is the oldest book from the West to be restored by the library, according to Tsao, who said the successful restoration of the religious text has historical significance and is recognition of the he team's professionalism and expertise.
Meanwhile, Wu thanked Tsao for undertaking to restore the Quran free of charge and noted that the rare opportunity to repair such an important Western religious work will help to raise the profile of the library's Book Hospital.