| The Honeybee
 
 Dr. Ibrahim B. SyedClinical 
  Professor of Medicine
 University of Louisville School of Medicine
 Louisville, KY 40292
 and
 President, Islamic Research Foundation International, Inc
 7102 W. Shefford Lane
 Louisville, KY 40242-6462
 E-Mail: IRFI@INAME.COM
 Website:  
  http://WWW.IRFI.ORG
 
The reader of the Qur'an must have been wondering 
why Surah 16, An-Nahl or the Bee is named after a lowly creature.  
In the scientific language all the 
honeybees belong to the genus Apis. The honeybee communicates with other 
honeybee using a dance language, which the scientists have discovered to be very 
complicated and highly developed. Karl von Frisch of the University of Munich in 
Germany, in the 1940s first discovered the significance of bees' dances. Once 
the honeybee discovers a source of food, it returns to the hive and the forager 
bee recruits other bees through both sound and dances and communicates 
information about the location of food.  
More than 2,000 years ago, Aristotle 
himself documented the honeybee's ability to recruit her nestmates to a good 
food source but did not speculate on how the communication took place. It took 
over 2,000 years to understand the communication system of the bee. Frisch and 
his followers were able to recognize a pattern in the dance. The forager walks 
across the vertical sheets of comb hanging in the hive and traces out the shape 
of a figure eight (8); she pauses in each loop to shake her body from side to 
side. A few potential recruits chase after the dancer attentively for some time 
and then fly out on their own toward the target. In 1943 von Frisch discovered 
that the direction in which the dancer faced during her waggling run pointed 
toward the food site in relation to the sun; if she waggled while facing 
straight upward, toward the 12 on a clockface, then the food could be found in 
the direction of the sun; if she waggled 60 degrees to the left of 12, facing 
the 10' 'O' clock, then the food lay 60 degrees to the left of the sun. In 
addition, he noticed that how fast the dancer completed her circuits 
corresponded to the distance between the hive and the feeding site; the closer 
the food, the more frenzied her pace. Von Frisch and his colleagues made 
detailed accounts of the dance language. They could observe the dance, decipher 
its meaning and then locate the food supply of which it spoke. This is a 
stunning accomplishment for scientists.  
 
  The sounds it makes with its wings are truly an 
essential part of the honeybee's dance language. The dancer bee emits sound 
signals that help the dance followers to find out where the dancer is located 
and how she is moving, which in turn offers them critical information regarding 
the direction and distance to the feeding site. The dance attenders receive 
these signals through the Johnston's organs located in their antennae, which are 
always held near the dancer. Because these organs are bilateral-one on the left 
and one on the dance followers can use them to judge their position with respect 
to the dancer and therefore understand the direction to the food. At the same 
time, the followers emit sounds that vibrate the comb. The forager stops her 
dance when she receives these signals and delivers samples of the food she has 
collected. These appetizers give the dance followers additional information 
about the taste, smell and quality of the food source. The bees attend the 
dancing for a while and then fly out to determine the food source on their own. 
If they are fortunate, they will find the food. If they fail, they will return 
to the nest and try again.  
The exactness of the Qur'anic words in 
their reference to scientific phenomena occurs in Surah 16, ayath 68, which 
states:  
	
		
			
			"And Thy Lord inspired the bee, saying: 
			Choose thou habitations in the hills and in the trees and in (men's) 
			habitations." 
 
Yusuf Ali says: "Auha: wahyan 
ordinarily means inspiration, the Message put into the mind or heart by Allah. 
Here the Bee's instinct is refereed to Allah's teaching, which id undoubtedly 
is.  
In the above verse, Allah (SWT) is 
commanding the bee to choose (to make a hive) a dwelling in the hills, trees and 
other places which man has built. In Arabic, the verb assumes a specific form 
when it is in the imperative form and can be either masculine or feminine 
according to the context. In the Qur'an, the Arabic command of ittakhizee 
(go choose) is given to the bee in the feminine imperative form. It is 
shockingly true that only the female bee finds a new home. The queen and the 
workers are the heart of the hive: the male drones exist solely to mate with the 
queen. Thus the Qur'an makes a very accurate statement when it refers only the 
female bee as the one which is being commanded from Allah (SWT) to make a 
dwelling. As we know the Qur'an is a book of Guidance and the theme of the 
Qur'an is "mankind" and it is not a book of science. However over 750 verses are 
found in the Qur'an which relate to scientific phenomena as an argument to 
invite the believers to the Truth. The noted scholar Afzalur Rahman in 
elaborating the interconnectedness between science and the Qur'an says:  
	
		
		The Qur'an clearly establishes the fact 
		that science and Qur'an are two aspects of the same Truth and there is 
		no contradiction between them... Thus the Qur'an introduces new 
		dimensions into the study of religion and its philosophy and seeks to 
		bring men of knowledge (scientists) closer to Allah through the study of 
		His Attributes and manifestations in the material world.  
In another verse in Surah 16, An-Nahl, the 
Qur'an says:  
	
		
			
			Then eat of all fruits (all produce of the 
			earth), and follow the ways of thy Lord, made smooth (for thee). 
			There cometh forth from their bellies a drink of hues (varying 
			colors), wherein is healing for mankind. Lo! herein is indeed 
			portent(Sign) for people who reflect. ......... 16: 69  
Allama Yusuf Ali in his commentary states 
"The bee assimilates the juice of various kinds of flowers and fruit, and forms 
within its body the honey, which it stores in its cells of wax. The different 
kinds of food from which it makes its honey give different colors to the honey, 
e.g., it is dark-brown, light-brown, yellow, white, and so on. The taste and 
flavor also varies, as in the case of heather honey, the honey formed from 
scented flowers, and so on. As food it is sweet and wholesome, and it is used in 
medicine. Note that while the instinctive individual acts are described in the 
singular number, the produce of "their bodies" is described in the plural, as 
the result of their collective effort.  
HONEY: A HEALING FOR MANKIND  
As stated in 16:69, there is a natural 
healing power in honey of great benefit to mankind. This has been documented in 
the world's oldest medical literature. For example the Sumerans and the Egyptian 
physicians about 4000 years ago used honey to treat internal and external 
wounds, ulcers, diseases of the eyes, lungs, skin and in particular, diseases of 
the stomach and intestines. The Chinese, Indians, Greeks and Romans have 
recorded similar practices. Hippocrates, the father of Western Medicine, used 
honey to treat a number of diseases. Ibn Sina, the Prince among Muslim 
physicians listed several beneficial uses of honey in his monumental work of 
medicine "The Canon of Medicine". Among the uses he listed are: 
preservation of youthfulness, improvement of memory, a feeling of happiness, 
assists in digestion, increase in appetite and helps promote in one's rendering 
of speech. 
 
Since 1937 it has been known that honey has 
antibacterial activity due to its high sugar concentration (76 g/100 ml), 
acidity (Ph=3.6-4.2) and the organic antibacterial compounds present in honey. 
The composition of honey is very complex containing a variety of biochemical 
compounds including vitamins, amino acids, enzymes, hormones, etc., It is used 
in the treatment of wounds and ulcers. Surgeons and physicians are suing honey 
in the treatment of gunshot wounds, ulcers, surface wounds, cuts and abrasions, 
in the treatment of gastroenteritis (diarrhoea). In the academia a number of 
Ph.D. dissertations have been written on honey, particularly on its biochemical 
properties. Endocrinologists say that glucose levels in blood of healthy 
volunteers are increased whereas among the diabetic patients it is decreased 
after consumption of honey.    
SMARTNESS OF THE HONEYBEE  
How smart is the common honeybee? It is far 
smarter than today's most powerful supercomputers. Modern computers can attain 
the amazing processing speed of 16 gigaflops or 16 billion simple arithmetic 
operations, such as adding two numbers, each second. On the otherhand the bee's 
brain shows that the lowly honeybee performs the equivalent of ten trillion 
operations per second. Very astounding!  
In the spring of 1983, the Smithsonian 
Institution conducted a symposium on animal intelligence at which one of the 
researchers was Princeton ethologist James L. Gould, an internationally renowned 
expert on honeybee behavior. In one of his experiments he wanted to observe the 
ways bee locate new food sources. To achieve this Gould provided honeybees with 
desirable food sources. Once they were accustomed to feeding at the stations, he 
moved the food sources by a factor of 1.25 the distance of the previous move. 
What Gould found was that after a few such moves the honeybees no longer had to 
search for the new location, but anticipated Gould's behavior so accurately that 
he found the bees circling the new location before he had even arrived and 
waiting for their food. The honeybees were able to construct quite a complex 
simulation of reality in their tiny brains (less than 10 milligrams) and deduce 
from past experience where Gould was going to place the food next.  
The bee does all of this while consuming a lot less 
power than a computer. According to Byte magazine, "a honeybee's brain 
dissipates less than 10 microwatts of energy... It is superior by about seven 
orders of magnitude to the most efficient of today's manufactured computers." 
What it means is that over ten million bee brains can operate on the power 
needed for a single 100-watt light bulb. The most efficient of today's computers 
uses hundreds of millions of times more energy to perform an equivalent number 
of operations. As shown above they are able to navigate across long distances to 
locate sources of nectar and then return to the hive and communicate directions 
to fellow bees. They prepare special food items such as royal jelly and 
beebread, for their young. They protect their home by recognizing and repelling 
intruders. They regularly remove garbage and other refuse from their hive. They 
control the climate in the hive by fanning the fresh air and sprinkling water 
during summer and by clustering together for warmth in the winter. When their 
hives become overcrowded, they are smart enough to know that some have to leave 
and establish new colonies and live independently. Yet, supercomputers require 
teams of programmers, engineers, and technicians. Bees truly are a marvel of 
Allah (SWT)'s creation. Is there any doubt why Surah 16, the Qur'an is called 
NAHL.  
This article is based on Jumuah Khutbahs 
(Friday Sermons) the author delivered at the Islamic Center of Madison, 
Wisconsin, Al-Fajr Mosque, Indianapolis and Islamic Center of Louisville, 
Louisville, Kentucky. The author is considered to be the world's foremost 
exponent for the interpretation of Al-Qur'an in the light of modern knowledge. 
The author encourages feed back from the readers. 
 
FURTHER READING  
1. Kirchner, W.H. and Towne, W.F.: The 
Sensory Basis of the Honeybee's Dance Language. Scientific American June 
1994  
2. Kamaruddin, M.Y.: Honey: a healing for 
mankind throughout the ages. THE FOUNTAIN July-Sep, 1993, Vol.1, No.3, 
pp. 4-6.  
3. Bee versus Computer, AWAKE 
February 8, 1995, pp.24-25.  4. Michael 
Talbot, " BEYOND THE QUANTUM " (New York, Macmillian Publishing Company) 
1990, pp. 178-179 |