According to al-khaleej.ae, the collection includes Quran copies in Arabic and translations of Quran in English, French, Dutch, Portuguese, Russian, Chinese, Somalian, Urdu, Korean, Albanian, Malayalam, and Pashtu.
The Dubai Customs gave the copies to the charity institute to be distributed.
The move was in line with the Dubai Customs’ social responsibilities to promote religious knowledge in the society, serving the Divine Book and supporting religious activities, it said.
Dar-ul-Birr is one of the first charity institutes in the United Arab Emirates and conducts and implements various charity projects.