The guidebook on Lebanese Arabic written by Thomas Milo for the Dutch military. Courtesy Thomas Milo
The guidebook on Lebanese Arabic written by Thomas Milo for the Dutch military. Courtesy Thomas Milo

The web and the word of God



How do you place the Quran, the word of God created without distortion or corruption, on to something as inherently unstable and unreliable as the internet?

It is a problem that is giving Thomas Milo, a Dutch typographer, linguist and inventor, the greatest challenge of his long and varied career.

He has been hired by the Omani government to create an online Quran that is not only searchable, but which also conforms to the aesthetic and calligraphic standards of today’s printed Quran while remaining impervious to digital technology’s potentially corrupting effects.

While there may be many thousands of versions of the Quran online at present, none are able to meet all three of these criteria, Mr Milo says.

“Since the policies regarding the integrity of the Quran text raise the stakes, this becomes a very interesting and challenging problem indeed,” says Mr Milo, 63.

“Unless you consider the Quran as something that is flexible and can be tampered with, which is what happens at the moment, then it still hasn’t been put online yet.”

One of the biggest problems is that it is impossible to guarantee that a reader viewing the Quran online is accessing the right text with the original spellings in the correct format.

Mr Milo says there are essentially two ways of putting the Quran on the web.

The first is to find and upload the best possible images. “You might then have a beautiful online Quran but the glitch is that it cannot be searched,” he says.

The other way to put the Quran online is to the employ the fonts, signs and symbols defined by the Unicode system, the effective lingua franca of the Internet, but that would sacrifice the many non-standard and ancient Arabic spellings that appear in the Quran text.

“What is happening now with the files that are disseminated as internet Qurans is that they cannot encode non-standard spellings and so some words are corrected or even replaced,” Mr Milo says.

While they may be purists, the standard that he and Oman’s ministry of awqif and religious affairs are aiming for is far from obscure.

Their model is the Quran that was produced under the auspices of King Fuad I by scholars from Al Azhar university in Cairo, an institution that is recognised as the world seat of Sunni Islamic and Arabic learning.This version of the Quran was printed in 1924, is still recognised as the standard version of the holy book and is the most widely available printed version to this day.

Unfortunately, to produce an online version of the Quran that is searchable using available technologies would mean sacrificing many of the aesthetic and orthographic qualities of the edition that is still recognised as Islam’s standard text.

“You would have an object that is married to the grand tradition of Arabic calligraphy that looks nothing like it should,” Mr Milo says.

“It would also be totally dependent on the operating system of the device you are using, so you cannot guarantee the display of the information that you broadcast.”

Mr Milo has spent much of his career designing Arabic fonts and understands better than anyone the problems this project faces.

“Fonts are unreliable,” he says.

“They sit on your machine, the information floats on the internet and where they meet you have the actual image, but unfortunately what sits on each machine is different.

“Even if the broadcaster has the most delicate selection of typefaces on an iPad, for example, the operating system would simply substitute the fonts for things they consider to be better for the job.”

As far as Mr Milo and the Omani ministry are concerned, this is a far from ideal situation.

Mr Milo may not exactly be a household name but his influence on Arabic text has been significant. Anyone who has used the Arabic version of Microsoft Office has probably used one of his fonts.

He and his team at DecoType – the company he founded in 1985 with his wife, designer Mirjam Somers, and her aircraft engineer brother, Peter Somers – are responsible for two of the most popular calligraphic fonts of Microsoft Office Middle East: DecoType Ruq’ah and DecoType Naskh.

In traditional Arabic calligraphy, Ruq’ah is the cursive script that is used for handwriting. Naskh, which is believed to have been invented by the Abbasid vizier and calligrapher Ibn Muqla in the 10th century, is traditionally used for copying and transcribing texts.

DecoType’s were the first digital versions of both scripts.

Mr Milo has spent much of the past 30 years travelling between his home in Amsterdam and California’s Silicon Valley, working as a consultant for companies such as Adobe and Microsoft.

It was not where his career seemed to be heading in 1976 when, after studying Slavic languages, Turkish and Arabic at university, he became a long-distance lorry driver to practise his new skills.

Mr Milo had wanted to concentrate on his Turkish but because he could speak Arabic, he was posted to Damman, in Saudi Arabia, from where he opened road-haul routes into Yemen.

A few years later, he made a career decision that led to one of the most formative events in his life.

In 1979, when Dutch troops became peacekeepers as part of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, Mr Milo volunteered as an interpreter, completing two tours of duty between 1980 and 1983.

While this brought him into frequent contact with suicide squads and guerrilla fighters, it also led to a commission for a guide to South Lebanese Arabic that became standard issue for all Dutch troops serving in Lebanon.

“I made a description of the border language of South Lebanon and I wanted this to be accompanied by the Arabic script that was used in the area,” Mr Milo says.

“I couldn’t find a supplier who could provide me with the correct solution so I had to make the book in a form that I didn’t like.”

His dissatisfaction, and the inability of printers to accurately replicate the richness and the diversity of Arabic as it is traditionally written, set the course for his subsequent career.

He went from being a linguist and translator to typography and developing software and is now one of the world’s foremost experts on traditional and digital Arabic typographic design.

Mr Milo’s philosophy is that technology should be designed to accommodate Arabic, rather than dictating how Arabic should be designed.

When he started his research in the early 1980s the world of information technology was a very different place.

“To use Arabic on a computer you had to hack into it at that time,” he says.

“There were two hurdles. The first was that there was no established standard for encoding anything other than Latin characters. The second hurdle was to be able to run text in two directions simultaneously on the same line.

“You need to be familiar with the results that you want to accomplish. Not only do you need to be able to stack letters in Arabic, but you need to be able to get the overlaps right because the letter blocks often clamp together.”

Mr Milo and the team at DecoType have also developed Tasmeem, an Arabic desktop publishing tool that enables its user to create digital documents with a level of control and calligraphic freedom normally associated with traditional, hand-rendered manuscripts.

This technology has been used by New York University Press for its new Library of Arabic Literature, a new series of Arabic editions and English translations of key works of classical and premodern Arabic literature funded by a grant from the New York University Abu Dhabi Institute.

It is a project of which Mr Milo is particularly proud.

“It may sound like I take an extreme position but I am merely trying to apply the same logic to Arabic typography that we apply in the West for ourselves, and I merely assume that Arabic script deserves the same treatment,” he says.

“Go for the best historical scripts, mechanise them and use them for literature. That’s what is being done for the Library of Arabic Literature.

“This is an intellectual challenge for me, not a religious one. I’m not even an Arab, but I think this is an important part of world civilisation and world heritage.

“To make the Quran safe on the web, we have to try to develop a different technology and by doing so, in the end, we will hopefully arrive at a new level of perfection in Arabic typography.”

nleech@thenational.ae

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NO OTHER LAND

Director: Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham, Rachel Szor, Hamdan Ballal

Stars: Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham

Rating: 3.5/5

PAKISTAN v SRI LANKA

Twenty20 International series
Thu Oct 26, 1st T20I, Abu Dhabi
Fri Oct 27, 2nd T20I, Abu Dhabi
Sun Oct 29, 3rd T20I, Lahore

Tickets are available at www.q-tickets.com

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North Pole stats

Distance covered: 160km

Temperature: -40°C

Weight of equipment: 45kg

Altitude (metres above sea level): 0

Terrain: Ice rock

South Pole stats

Distance covered: 130km

Temperature: -50°C

Weight of equipment: 50kg

Altitude (metres above sea level): 3,300

Terrain: Flat ice
 

Ms Yang's top tips for parents new to the UAE
  1. Join parent networks
  2. Look beyond school fees
  3. Keep an open mind
The specs: 2019 Mercedes-Benz C200 Coupe


Price, base: Dh201,153
Engine: 2.0-litre turbocharged four-cylinder
Transmission: Nine-speed automatic
Power: 204hp @ 5,800rpm
Torque: 300Nm @ 1,600rpm
Fuel economy, combined: 6.7L / 100km

Your Guide to the Home
  • Level 1 has a valet service if you choose not to park in the basement level. This level houses all the kitchenware, including covetable brand French Bull, along with a wide array of outdoor furnishings, lamps and lighting solutions, textiles like curtains, towels, cushions and bedding, and plenty of other home accessories.
  • Level 2 features curated inspiration zones and solutions for bedrooms, living rooms and dining spaces. This is also where you’d go to customise your sofas and beds, and pick and choose from more than a dozen mattress options.
  • Level 3 features The Home’s “man cave” set-up and a display of industrial and rustic furnishings. This level also has a mother’s room, a play area for children with staff to watch over the kids, furniture for nurseries and children’s rooms, and the store’s design studio.
     
The specs

Engine: Four electric motors, one at each wheel

Power: 579hp

Torque: 859Nm

Transmission: Single-speed automatic

Price: From Dh825,900

On sale: Now

Sheer grandeur

The Owo building is 14 storeys high, seven of which are below ground, with the 30,000 square feet of amenities located subterranean, including a 16-seat private cinema, seven lounges, a gym, games room, treatment suites and bicycle storage.

A clear distinction between the residences and the Raffles hotel with the amenities operated separately.

The biog

Hometown: Cairo

Age: 37

Favourite TV series: The Handmaid’s Tale, Black Mirror

Favourite anime series: Death Note, One Piece and Hellsing

Favourite book: Designing Brand Identity, Fifth Edition

In numbers: PKK’s money network in Europe

Germany: PKK collectors typically bring in $18 million in cash a year – amount has trebled since 2010

Revolutionary tax: Investigators say about $2 million a year raised from ‘tax collection’ around Marseille

Extortion: Gunman convicted in 2023 of demanding $10,000 from Kurdish businessman in Stockholm

Drug trade: PKK income claimed by Turkish anti-drugs force in 2024 to be as high as $500 million a year

Denmark: PKK one of two terrorist groups along with Iranian separatists ASMLA to raise “two-digit million amounts”

Contributions: Hundreds of euros expected from typical Kurdish families and thousands from business owners

TV channel: Kurdish Roj TV accounts frozen and went bankrupt after Denmark fined it more than $1 million over PKK links in 2013 

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Key facilities
  • Olympic-size swimming pool with a split bulkhead for multi-use configurations, including water polo and 50m/25m training lanes
  • Premier League-standard football pitch
  • 400m Olympic running track
  • NBA-spec basketball court with auditorium
  • 600-seat auditorium
  • Spaces for historical and cultural exploration
  • An elevated football field that doubles as a helipad
  • Specialist robotics and science laboratories
  • AR and VR-enabled learning centres
  • Disruption Lab and Research Centre for developing entrepreneurial skills
Formula Middle East Calendar (Formula Regional and Formula 4)
Round 1: January 17-19, Yas Marina Circuit – Abu Dhabi
 
Round 2: January 22-23, Yas Marina Circuit – Abu Dhabi
 
Round 3: February 7-9, Dubai Autodrome – Dubai
 
Round 4: February 14-16, Yas Marina Circuit – Abu Dhabi
 
Round 5: February 25-27, Jeddah Corniche Circuit – Saudi Arabia