https://ia801604.us.archive.org/2/items/TheDaysOfProphetMuhammadWithHisWivesBook_201706/The%20Days%20of%20Prophet%20Muhammad%20with%20his%20wives%20book.pdf
ABOUT THE WORD 'LORD'
e/ he word lord in English has several related meanings.
The original meaning is ‘master’ or ‘ruler’, and in this sense it is
often used to refer to human beings: ‘the lord of the mansion’ or
‘Lord So-and-so’ (in the United Kingdom, for example). The
word Lord with a capital L is used in the lexicon of Islam to refer
to the One and Only God — Allah. In Islam, there is no ambiguity
about the meaning of this word. While it is true that one may
occasionally use the word lord (whether capitalized or not) to
refer to a human being, in Islamic discourse the reference of this
term is always clear from the context. Whereas for Christians,
Hindus and other polytheists, the word Lord with a capital L may
refer to Allah, to Jesus or to some imagined deity, for Muslims,
there can be no plurality of meaning. Allah alone is the Lord, and
the Lord is Allah — not Jesus, not Rama, not any other being.
ThE EditOR
PUBLISHER'S NOTE
Qylll praise and thanks belong to Allah alone, the One, the
Almighty, and All-Merciful. Blessings and peace be upon Prophet
Muhammad, the last of His Messengers and Prophets, his family,
his Companions and all those who follow in his footsteps until the
end of time.
Allah’s Messenger (^) said: “The best of you are the best
(in treatment of) their wives and I am the best (in treatment of) my
wives.” In his easy style, Abdul-Munim al-Hashimi presents
scenes and snapshots of Prophet Muhammad’s domestic life as he
engaged on a daily basis with his wives, who were, despite their
honoured positions, human beings, with strengths and
weaknesses, noble intentions and ordinary insecurities. Using
authentic hadiths and anecdotes from the classical historians, the
author shows how the Messenger (jjgj) dealt with each of the
Mothers of the Believers with gentleness, wisdom and love.
In this revised edition, the clarity of the discussions has
been improved. It is our hope that this revised third edition of The
Days of Prophet Muhammad (jjj| ) with His Wives will be of even
greater benefit than the first — to many Muslim husbands and
wives.
May Allah bless the efforts of all who contributed to the
production of this book, and may it be acceptable to Him.
MuhAMMAd ibiN 'Abdul MohsiN AHuwAijm
Managing Director
International Islamic Publishing House
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
INTRODUCTION
In the Name of Allah,
the All-Compassionate, AU-Merciful
cj he Prophet (jjjg — Salla-Allahu ‘alayhi wa sallam —
Blessings and peace be upon him) had a wonderful home life that
was characterized by purity. This was because his noble heart was
filled with compassion and empathy for others.
His marital life was an example of activity, vitality, and
sympathy. His pure nature that filled his noble household with
warmth and affection; a loving home that was void of any
coolness, indifference or harshness.
The Prophet (jjj§) never let the momentousness of his
prophethood become a barrier between him and his wives.
Through his mercy, intimacy and openness, he allowed them to
forget that they were standing in front of the Messenger of Allah,
and that they were talking to him and living with him in the same
place.
The reader may wonder how ‘A’ishah (t^ — radiya Allahu
‘anha — may Allah be pleased with her), talked to the Prophet in
front of her father, Abu Bakr — radiya Allahu ‘anhu — may
Allah be pleased with him) during the incident of the slander
against her, where she said, “Speak, and say not but the truth...” or
16 Introduction
how Hafsah said something to him that made her father, ‘Umar
ibn al-Khattab (*£$,), angry; but when ‘Umar was going to punish
her, the Prophet (^§) said: «I did not invite you for this reason.»
Such were the pleasant days that the Prophet (jjg) spent with
his wives, may Allah be pleased with them and have mercy on
them.
WITH KMADceJAH [%)
“e/his man, Muhammad, cannot be compared to anyone
else,” said ‘Umar ibn Asad, Khadeejah’s uncle, in a loud voice.
The Prophet’s uncle Al-‘Abbas ibn ‘Abdul-Muttalib, who was
also present at this meeting, appreciated this comment about his
nephew. This meeting occurred after the Prophet (jg) returned to
Makkah from a trade journey commissioned by Khadeejah (t^),
and she noticed more profits and blessings in her money than she
was accustomed to. Her servant, who accompanied Muhammad
(jit) on the journey, also told her of Muhammad’s good manners,
honesty, deep thought, sincerity and faith. She realized that she
wanted to marry him. She disclosed her wish to her friend Nafeesa
the daughter of Maniya, who immediately went to Muhammad
(18) and broke the good news to him. He agreed and requested his
uncles to go to Khadeejah’s uncle and to discuss the issue.
The meeting ended with an agreement between Banu
Hashim (the children of Hashim) and Khadeejah’s uncle, ‘Umar
ibn Asad, who represented her on behalf of her deceased parents.
The good news spread to every comer of Makkah, until
someone went to Quraysh and said, “O people of Quraysh, have
you not heard the news?”
They said, “What is it?”
The Prophet’s uncle then announced, “Muhammad, the son
of ‘Abdullah, who used to shepherd our sheep in the pastures, has
married Khadeejah, the daughter of Khuwaylid, the son of Asad.”
18 With Khadeejah
A reply then came from one of them, who said, “Woe unto
you, cousin! 1 ”
So the blessed marriage took place. Later on, the Prophet
(Ig) began to spend long hours in seclusion in the Cave of Hira’,
meditating and pondering the creation around him. Meanwhile,
Khadeejah spent her time looking after him and her home in
filling his life with delight and enjoyment.
One day, after a retreat in the Cave of Hira’, Muhammad
(5||) returned home trembling with fear and saying, “Cover
me...!” Then he said, “I went out until I was at the mountain. I
heard a voice coming from the sky saying, ‘O Muhammad, you
are the Messenger of Allah and I am Gabriel.’ So I raised my head
up to look, and I saw Gabriel looking in the form of a man with his
feet spread across the horizon saying, ‘O Muhammad, you are the
Messenger of Allah and I am Gabriel.’ Then I stopped in my place
looking and never walked forward nor backward until he went
away. And here I am O mother of ‘Abdullah.”
Khadeejah responded by saying, “O father of Al-Qasim, I
sent some of my messengers to look for you until they reached
Makkah and then returned .” 2 Then she smiled a reassuring smile
spread across her noble face and she said, “Cheer up my dear
husband and stand firm for I hope that you are the Prophet of this
nation.”
1 That is, “Do not speak disparagingly of this man: “He is the son of ‘Abdul-
Muttalib, and he is the ‘trustworthy.’ Who among Quraysh suits Khadeejah
better than Muhammad? What’s more, who among Quraysh is like Muhammad?”
2 That is, Khadeejah had sent people out to search for Muhammad (bpuh) as
she was worried about him. (Editor)
The days of Prophet Muhammad with his wives 19
After that, she went with the Prophet (jg) to her cousin,
Waraqah ibn Nawfal ibn Asad ibn ‘Abdul- ‘Uzza, who had
embraced Christianity in the pre-Islamic period, who used to write
the Bible in Hebrew. He was a blind old man.
Khadeejah said, “My cousin! Listen to your nephew!”
Waraqah said, “O my nephew! What did you see?” The
Messenger of Allah (jgg) told him what had happened to him.
Waraqah replied, “This is the Namoos (the Angel entrusted with
Divine messages) that Allah sent to Moses. I wish I were younger.
I wish I could live to the time when your people will drive you
out.”
Muhammad (jjj§) asked, “Will they drive me out?”
Waraqah answered, in the affirmative and said, “Anyone
who came with something similar to what you have brought was
treated with hostility; and if I should live till that day, then I will
support you strongly.”
This scene ended and the Holy Message continued to grow
and spread through Muhammad (s||), despite the obstacles placed
in its way. During that early period of Islam, when Khadeejah was
one of Muhammad’s few helpers and supporters, an old man came
to Makkah to buy some clothes and perfume. That old man was
called ‘Afeef al-Kindee. He said, “I came to Makkah at the time of
jahiliyah (pre-Islamic period) in order to buy some clothes and
perfumes for my wife. When I was there, I met ‘Abbas ibn
‘Abdul-Muttalib; and while I was talking to him and looking at
the Kaaba, a young man came and turned his face towards the
Kaaba, then a boy came and did as the man did, then after awhile a
woman came and stood behind the man and the boy. Then the
man bowed down and the boy and the woman bowed down too.
20 With Khadeejah
The man then raised his face up and so did the boy and the
woman. Then the man prostrated and so did the boy and the
woman.”
When the old man saw this, he looked at ‘Abbas and said,
“O ‘Abbas, this is a remarkable thing I saw!”
‘Abbas then said, “A remarkable thing? Do you know who
that man is?”
“No, I do not know,” the old man replied.
‘Abbas then said, “This is Muhammad the son of
‘Abdullah, and he is my nephew. And do you know who that boy
is?”
“No, I do not!” the old man replied.
‘Abbas then said, “He is ‘ Ali the son of Abu Talib, and he is
also my nephew. And do you know who that woman is?”
“No, I do not!” the old man replied.
Then ‘Abbas said, “This is Khadeejah the daughter of
Khuwaylid, and she is that man’s wife. In fact, this nephew of
mine claims that the Lord of heavens and earth has admitted him
to this religion (that he believes in). I swear by Allah — as far as I
know — that there are no people who believe in this religion
except these three people, and I wish I were the fourth.”
‘Abbas then made that wish a reality when he embraced
Islam and became a reliable aid for his nephew.
As for Khadeejah, her loving and stalwart support of the
Prophet ( p& ) during these early and challenging times accorded
her an elevated status in the eyes of Allah and His Messenger (j|g).
To such an extent was his status that on one occasion Gabriel
The days of Prophet Muhammad with his wives 21
came to earth from the seventh heaven to give Khadeejah
greetings from Allah. Gabriel asked Muhammad (§g) to inform
her of Allah’s greetings of peace ( salam ), and she replied, “Allah
is As-Salam, and salam verily comes from Him, and convey to
Gabriel my salam (greeting) also.”
Moreover, Allah informed her through His Messenger (|g)
that she would have “a palace of hollowed pearl in paradise,
wherein there will be neither noise nor fatigue.”
‘Ali ibn Abi Talib (4^,) narrated that the Messenger of
Allah (m) said, “The best of the world’s women is Mary (during
her lifetime), and the best of the world’s women is Khadeejah
(during her lifetime).”
Khadeejah lived as an honourable free woman, and died as
a merciful believing woman. The Prophet (sg|) said after she died,
«Allah has not blessed me with a woman like Khadeejah. She
believed in me at a time when people called me a liar, and she
comforted me with her money at a time when people prohibited
me from money and from amongst all of my wives, Allah has
blessed me with children from her only.»
WITH SAUDA THE DAUGHTER
OF ZUM'AH t<fc)
ct/jfter Khadeejah’s death, the Prophet (|g) had to
continue performing his religious duties, in addition to meeting
his daily and physical needs. The Prophet (jg) needed someone
who could take care of him and support him in his mission. Given
that his daughters were married and had children of their own, this
need could only be met through marriage.
Sauda had been married to her cousin, Al-Sakran ibn ‘Amr
ibn ‘Abd-Shams. She was from the people of ‘Amer (an Arabian
tribe), and from Quraysh as well. She emigrated with her husband
to Abyssinia along with those who emigrated the second time to
escape from Quraysh and their persecution. Her husband died
while in Abyssinia, leaving her without any supporter. If she
returned to her people, who were still disbelievers, they would
have tortured or even killed her.
The Messenger of Allah (jjjg) heard about her situation and
appreciated her adherence to her religion; so he sent someone to
ask her if she would marry him. Ibn Sa‘d tells us the story of their
blessed marriage as follows:
After Sauda had spent her waiting period 3 in Makkah,
Khawlah the daughter of Hakim and the wife of ‘Uthman ibn
Math‘oon, came to the Prophet (s|g) and said, “O Messenger of
3 Allah’s prescribed wailing period for a woman after divorce or the death of
her husband, after which she can marry another man.
24 With Sauda the daughter ofZum ‘ah
Allah! I suppose you feel lonely after the death of the mother of
the believers, Khadeejah.”
The Prophet (jg) then said sadly: “Yes, indeed. Khadeejah
was my daughters’ mother and a real homemaker.”
Khawlah then said, “Do you want me to propose someone
to you?”
The Prophet (jj|) said, “Yes, since you women are good at
it.”
So Khawlah went to ask Sauda’s permission and Sauda
said, “It is all up to the Prophet (j|g).” According to Martin Lings,
she said, “I am at thy service, O Messenger of Allah.”
The Prophet (j||) then told Sauda to ask one of her male
relations to be her guardian. She asked Hatib ibn ‘Amr ibn ‘Abd-
Shams to marry her to the Prophet (0j, which he did. They were
married in Ramadan, ten years after Muhammad’s prophethood
began.
The Prophet (jig) married Sauda in Makkah and she
emigrated with him to Madinah. She tried to compensate for what
Khadeejah used to do. She tried by attempting to relieve his pain
and helping him to forget what his people had done to him.
‘A’ishah (t^,) once described Sauda as saying, “Sauda
asked the permission of the Prophet to leave earlier on the eve of a
Friday, and she was a fat, slow woman, and the Prophet gave her
permission.” 4
The Messenger of Allah’s marriage to Sauda did not take
place only because he wanted to fulfill his own needs, but was
4 It seems that the author quotes ‘A’ishah’s physical description of Sawdah
and the subsequent hadiths about her in order to show that the Prophet did not
marry out of lust. (Editor)
The days of Prophet Muhammad with his wives 25
based on a loftier and more sacred principle; that those who are
patient and persevere through hardships deserve to be
compensated with kind and caring treatment.
That is why Sauda did not want her husband to leave her
and said, “It is not the marital matters that I care much for, but it is
that I would like to be Muhammad’s wife on the Day of
Resurrection.”
She expressed this sentiment when she offered the Prophet
(jj[|) to give up her turn in spending the nights with him to
‘A’ishah and the Prophet accepted; then Allah revealed this verse:
Ltl y£> 1 ,
»*< >r-i
OTA
<|And if a wife fears cruelty or desertion on her husband’s
part there is no blame on them if they arrange an amicable
settlement between themselves; and such settlement is
best..> (Qur’an 4: 128)
Sauda adhered to the traditions of Prophet Muhammad (J§)
and she remained very righteous after his death. In fact, she had
gone on hajj with him once, but after he died she never went to
hajj again not did she leave her house, in accordance with the
Qur’anic verse that says:
orr : Sjj-) ••• s b*j
^And stay [quietly] in your houses... (Qur’an 33: 33)
She said, “I went on hajj and ‘umrah and now I will stay at
home as my Lord says; and I will never go to hajj after the
‘Farewell Pilgrimage’, the last time and the only time the Prophet
went to hajj.”
A
WITH WISH AH [%)
<zJ he Prophet (0) loved Abu Bakr as-Siddeeq (^) more
than anybody else, particularly after the loss of his uncle Abu
Talib and his wife Khadeejah, who were the most powerful
supporters among his people. Thus the Prophet (s|g) decided to
marry Abu Bakr’s daughter, ‘A’ishah, and to become his son-in-
law.
The Prophet (s|g) emigrated from Makkah to Madinah
accompanied by Abu Bakr ( 4 ^,) who understood Quraysh very
well, and knew both their bad qualities as well as their good. He
was a well-known and honourable merchant to whom people
came to seek advice and knowledge.
Such was ‘A’ishah’s father. As for her mother, she was
‘Umm Roman bint ‘Umayr ibn ‘Amer and was descended from
the sons of Al-Hareeth ibn Ghanam ibn Ka‘b. She was among the
first group who embraced Islam, and had been married to
‘Abdullah ibn ‘Abdul-Asad before she married Abu Bakr. She
had a son from her first husband named At-Tufail, and she gave
birth to ‘A’ishah and ‘Abdur-Rahman after marrying Abu Bakr.
She emigrated to Madinah after the establishment of Islam there.
When she died, Abu Bakr said, “O Allah! You know best how
Umm Roman was hurt for the sake of You and Your Prophet.”
The Prophet (|g) used to entrust ‘A’ishah to Umm Roman’s
charge and saying: “O Umm Roman, be kind to ‘A’ishah and be
mindful of me by this kindness.”
28 With ‘A ’ishah
The Prophet (jjj) used to love this clean, pure household of
Abu Bakr (gg) because its head, a man who needs no
introduction, was of unquestionable character and lineage.
The Messenger of Allah (jg) had already thought about
proposing marriage to ‘A’ishah when Khawlah bint Hakim
Aslamiyah said to him, “What do you say about marrying
‘A’ishah the daughter of Abu Bakr?” He nodded his head in
approval. Then Khawlah went to Umm Roman to tell her the news
and said, “O Umm Roman, you cannot imagine how Allah (§g)
has blessed your household!”
Umm Roman said, “What is it?”
Khawlah said, “The Messenger of Allah sent me to seek
‘A’ishah for marriage.”
Umm Roman said, “Wait for Abu Bakr; he is coming
soon.”
When Abu Bakr came back, Khawlah told him the news
and he said, “Is she suitable for him? She is his niece.” 5
Khawlah then went back to the Prophet (^g) to tell him what
Abu Bakr had told her, and he replied: “Go back and tell Abu
Bakr that he is my brother in Islam and I am his, and his daughter
is good enough for me.”
Abu Bakr (4^,) thought deeply about this and then went to
Mut‘am ibn ‘Uday, who had proposed ‘A’ishah for marriage to
his son Jubayr. These people were still disbelievers. When Abu
Bakr (gg>) entered their house they said, “O son of Abu Qahafah,
5 Abu Bakr meant this figuratively, not literally: He and the Prophet (bpuh)
were ‘brothers in Islam’ only, and not blood brothers. (Editor)
The days of Prophet Muhammad with his wives 29
A
we fear that if our son married your daughter ‘A’ishah, then she
would convince him of Islam and we do not want this to
happen .” 6
Abu Bakr (^) did not reply; on the contrary, he was very
pleased. For he was now free of their agreement and he could give
his full agreement for the blessed marriage.
‘A’ishah told of how she became married to the Messenger
of Allah (jg|) and said, “The Prophet (|g) came to our house, and
many people gathered there to meet him. Then my mother came to
me while I was playing. She took me, fixed my hair and washed
my face, then took me to the door where the Prophet (j jg) was
sitting. I was so embarrassed; I melted in shyness. Then my
mother put me beside the Prophet (j]j§) and said, ‘This is your
wife; may Allah (§g) bless her for you, and bless you for her.’
People then left the room, and that night nothing was
slaughtered for me. I was nine years old at that time.”
People described ‘A’ishah on her wedding day and said,
“She was a nimble, wide-eyed bride, with curly hair and a shiny
face.”
‘A’ishah was the most jealous woman of all the Prophet’s
wives because she loved him much more than they did. Her
jealousy was demonstrated the day he got married to Asma’ bint
an-Nu‘man Kindiah. She became very apprehensive when she
saw Asma’s beauty and worried that she would possess his heart.
So Hafsah bint ‘Umar called some of the Prophet’s wives and told
them, “A strange woman is trying to possess his heart and keep us
out of it.”
6 This seems to have been an excuse put forth by that non-Muslim family in
order to get out of an agreement to marry into a Muslim family. (Editor)
30 With ‘A’ishah
In response to this, the wives planned a scheme to set
Asma’ up in a situation that would distance her from the Prophet
OH). When the Prophet OH) learned of their trick, he said, “O
Lord! Turn their plot away from me.”
Moreover, ‘A’ishah once switched her turn to spend the
night with the Prophet ( 0 ) with Hafsah’s to see what the Prophet
would do when he found Hafsah instead of ‘A’ishah.
‘A’ishah spent the rest of her life with the Prophet ( 0 ) until
his death. The Prophet OH ) died while his head was resting on
‘A’ishah’s chest, as she related, “He died between my chest and
my neck, then I put his head on a pillow. People became very
quiet while I was mourning and suffering deep sadness.”
WITH HAFSAH SINT 'UMAR (*}
K 4
a/ he Messenger of Allah (^) once said to ‘Umar (4^),
“Hafsah will be married to a man who is better than ‘Uthman and
‘Uthman will marry a woman who is better than Hafsah.”
This was the good news that the Prophet (4jSj ) gave ‘Umar
when he went to him to complain of the behaviour of his two
Companions, Abu Bakr (4^,) and ‘Uthman (4^,). In this story
‘Umar related, “My daughter Hafsah lost her husband, Khunays
ibn Hudhayfa as-Sahmi, who was one of the Companions of
Allah’s Messenger. Khunays had fought in the battle of Badr and
died in Madinah. I met ‘Uthman ibn ‘Affan and suggested that he
marry Hafsah, saying, ‘If you wish you can marry Hafsah bint
‘Umar.’ He said, ‘I will think it over.’ I waited for a few days, then
‘Uthman said to me, ‘I am of the opinion that I shall not marry at
present.’ Then I met Abu Bakr and said, ‘If you wish I will marry
you Hafsah bint ‘Umar.’ He kept quiet and did not give me any
reply, and I became more angry with him than I was with
‘Uthman. Some days later, the Messenger of Allah asked for her
hand in marriage, and I married her to him. Later on Abu Bakr met
me and said, ‘Perhaps you were angry with me when you offered
Hafsah to me for marriage and I gave no reply to you?’ I said,
‘Yes.’ Abu Bakr said, ‘Nothing prevented me from accepting your
offer except having known that the Prophet once spoke of Hafsah
and I did not want to disclose the secret of the Messenger of Allah.
However, had he given her up, I would surely have accepted
her.’”
32 With Hafsah bint ‘Umar
At that time, ‘Uthman was still very sad over the loss of his
wife Ruqayya, the daughter of the Prophet (jj|), and he had the
desire to marry her sister, Umm Kulthoom. The Prophet (jgjj)
married Hafsah in order to strengthen his relationship with her
father ‘Umar, who was an Islamic hero and known as Al-Farooq
(‘The Distinguished) through whom Allah (§g) distinguished
between right and wrong. When ‘Umar embraced Islam, the
Messenger of Allah (s||) said, «Gabriel came to me and said, ‘The
angels are very happy because ‘Umar has embraced Islam, and
‘Umar is a light for the people in Paradise.’»
Hafsah, who was now a member of the Prophet’s
household, was one of the greatest Muslim women. For most of
her life she fasted during the day and prayed during the night,
hoping for Allah’s mercy.
Hafsah died during the rule of Marwan ibn Hakam, during
the month of Sha‘ban, forty-five years after the emigration of the
Prophet (j|g). May Allah be pleased with Hafsah, the mother of the
believers.
WITH UMM HABEEBAH* RAMLAH
THE DAUGHTER OF ABU SUFYAN (t&)
t/bmm Habeebah was the daughter of Abu Sufyan, one of
the most tenacious enemies of Muhammad (j||) and Islam. Abu
Sufyan led armies against Muhammad (jjjjg) many times, and did
not enter the fold of Islam until the conquest of Makkah.
Umm Habeebah had embraced Islam with her husband,
‘Ubaydullah ibn Jahsh, and emigrated to Abyssinia with him.
There her husband, finding the whole land Christian, abandoned
Islam and converted to Christianity. She found herself in a most
painful position as she could not remain with her husband nor
could she return to her father. With regards to her husband, Islam
decrees that a Muslim woman shall not marry a man unless he is a
Muslim. As for her father, he was not only a polytheist, but one of
the chiefs of resistance to the truth. Having come from the wealthy
family of Banu Umayyah, Umm Habeebah was accustomed to
living in worldly comfort before entering Islam. In contrast, she
now shut herself in with her little daughter, away from the eyes of
all men. Forgotten and forsaken, she lived under very difficult
circumstances, but adhered steadfastly to Islam.
She might have been forgotten by men, but Allah (<$g) in
His mercy forgets no one. One day, as she sat alone in her room in
that foreign land, a slave named Abraha knocked on her door and
said that he had been sent by the King of Abyssinia to deliver a
message. The message was from Prophet Muhammad (Jg), and he
was requesting her hand in marriage. The King said that if she
34 With Umm Habeebah, Ramlah the daughter of Abu Sufyan
accepted the proposal she was to name one of the Muslims in
Abyssinia as her guardian. Umm Habeebah was oveijoyed; she
had been not forgotten after all. Not only was this the highest
honour, but Muhammad (jg) had also sent her four hundred dinars
as a dowry. This was considered a very large sum of money at that
time, and of which she was badly in need. Although Muhammad
(3|§) could not meet his wife in the distant Abyssinia, Umm
Habeebah was greatly joyed by the fact that he had thought of her,
the financial support he sent to her, and the honour and protection
that his name gave her.
Six years later, when the emigrant Umm Habeebah could
finally return from Abyssinia, she came to Madinah. Muhammad
(3§|), who had just returned victorious from Khaybar, gave her a
most cordial welcome.
One day, Abu Sufyan came to visit his daughter in Madinah
thinking that he could dissuade her from Islam. When he entered
her house and tried to sit on her mattress, she pulled it away and
did not let him sit on it.
Abu Sufyan said, “Do you take this mattress away from me
or for me?”
She said, “I am taking it away from you, because this is
Muhammad’s and you are a polytheist.”
He said in anger, “You have been smitten by evil since you
left me.”
She said, “On the contrary, goodness is what has befallen
me.
On the day of the conquest of Makkah, Abu Sufyan entered
Islam. In response, the Prophet (jg) honoured him and asked a
caller to proclaim that, “Whoever shall enter the Holy House will
The days of Prophet Muhammad with his wives 35
be safe, and whoever shall enter Abu Sufyan’s house will be
safe.”
So he became one of the Muslims, and his daughter, the
mother of the believers, was one of the Prophet’s pure wives: a
woman that he married and honoured to show people that Islam
calls for charity to all believers, men and women.
WITH JUWAYRIYAH BINT HARITH (<A.)
*
A
’ishah (t^), mother of the believers, described
Juwayriyah bint Harith, “She was a pretty, kind woman, whoever
saw her admired her.”
The story of her marriage to the Messenger of Allah (jg)
began when the Prophet knew that Harith ibn Dirar, the head of
the Mustaliq tribe, was planning to attack the Muslims. It was in
the month of Sha‘ban six years after the emigration of the Prophet
(jg). Harith ibn Dirar was the master and leader of the Mustaliq
tribe, and his daughter was Barrah, who came to be known as
Juwayriyah after her marriage to the Prophet (s|§).
The battle took place between the Muslim army and the
Mustaliq tribe at a spring called Muraisee’. The Muslims won that
battle and many prisoners of war, men and women, were taken
from the Mustaliq people. One of them was Juwayriyah, who was
married to her cousin MusafT ibn Safwan. Her husband was an
ardent enemy of Islam, and he was killed in the battle. Juwayriyah
came to the Prophet (s||) to complain of her situation. ‘A’ ishah
was with the Prophet when Juwayriyah came, and she said, “By
Allah I felt misgivings the moment I saw her at the door, and I
knew that he would see what I saw of her beauty.”
She entered and said, “I am Juwayriyah bint Harith, the
daughter of the leader of Mustaliq, and you can see what has
befallen to me. I was considered as part of the share of Thabit ibn
Qays, and I have come to seek your help in paying my ransom.”
38 With Juwayriyah bint Harith
The Prophet (jg) then said: “Do you prefer something better
than being free?”
She said, “What is that?”
He (j|§) said, “I pay your ransom and marry you.” And she
accepted.
The marriage of the Prophet (|g) to Juwayriyah was a great
lesson through which he erased the commonly held notion that
war prisoners must be humiliated and treated badly. Moreover, he
taught his Companions how to preserve the honour of people who
were honoured among their own people, like Juwayriyah.
This marriage left a good impression upon the Mustaliq
people, particularly when the Prophet’s Companions responded
by releasing all of their prisoners to honour the Prophet (5K) now
that he had become a son-in-law of the Mustaliq.
Mother of the believers, ‘A’ishah, said, “Prisoners were
captured amongst the Mustaliq people, so he gave up the share of
the fifth 7 and distributed the rest to the Companions. Then he
married Juwayriyah after he paid her ransom to Thabit ibn Qays.
When the news reached the Companions, they said, ‘The
Prophet’s marriage relatives should not be kept as prisoners’, so
they released them all.”
Harith ibn Dirar came to the Prophet (s|g) and said, “My
daughter should not be a war prisoner; she is the daughter of the
tribe’s chief, so let her go free!” The Prophet ($g) then asked him
to let her choose, and her father was pleased with that. However,
7 A fifth of the booty was ordained by Allah to be allotted to the leader of the
Muslims and the Islamic State to be distributed to orphans and other needy
members of society (see Qur’an 8: 4). (Editor)
The days of Prophet Muhammad with his wives 39
when Juwayriyah was asked to choose, she chose Allah (§g) and
His Messenger (jgg).
When Harith saw that, he embraced Islam. Islam, through
its mercy and forgiveness, won this man after he had been one of
its ardent enemies.
Thus Juwayriyah became a member of the Prophet’s
household. Her marriage was an example of Islam’s mercy and
forgiveness by demonstrating how people should be treated
honourably even when one has the power and freedom to do
otherwise. May Allah be pleased with Juwayriyah bint Harith.
WITH ZAYNAB BINT JAHSH 1%,)
Zaynab bint Jahsh, who was known for her generosity to
the poor, was the daughter of Umaymah bint ‘Abdul-Muttalib, the
Prophet’s aunt. Zaynab’s first marriage was to Zayd ibn Harithah.
Zayd, who used to be a slave of Khadeejah, was given to the
Prophet (H§) by Khadeejah when she married him.
During that time when Zayd was the Prophet’s slave,
Zayd’s father, after a long search, found his son and came to the
Prophet ( 0 ), along with Zayd’s uncle, to take him back. Zayd,
however, preferred to stay with the Prophet as a slave rather than
to go back with his father as a free man. The Prophet ( 0 ) then set
him free and adopted him; he was called Zayd ibn Muhammad
until Allah ($g) revealed this verse:
. 4JUI jit
(o
*> >
^Call them by [the names of] their fathers, that is more just
in the sight of Allah.. (Qur’an 33: 5 )
After the revelation of this verse, adoption was prohibited. 8
A few years later, a divine command was revealed to the
Prophet ( 0 ) that he should marry Zaynab to Zayd ibn Harithah.
Zaynab at first refused, but this was not accepted from her, and
Allah (|g) revealed:
8 When adoption is prohibited in Islam, the time-honoured practice of
guardianship is highly encouraged. Muslims are urged to take orphan children
under their care, and to raise them and educate them as they would their own
children, until the orphans are mature. (Editor)
42 With Zaynab bint Jahsh
o' 4ji( i ^
/ <^3\ \ ' > *fZ\'' ** s > s' /* f ^ »* , y/S * V
^Ar* lH 7 *^** •^ u ' cr^i o*J jv*/*' Cfl U&
(Vi : v i>Vl; jj^)
4lt is not for a believer, man or woman, when Allah and His
Messenger have decreed a matter that they should have any
option in their decision. And whoever disobeys Allah and
His Messenger, has indeed strayed into plain error .8
(Qur’an 33: 36)
Although Zaynab accepted the marriage, she did not show
respect to her husband because she felt that a former slave was no
match for her noble lineage.
Zayd, having become fed up with her pride, went to the
Prophet (j||) to complain. The Prophet (j||) used to say to him,
“Keep your wife and fear Allah.” However, their life together
could not continue and Zayd divorced Zaynab. It was then that
Allah (|||) revealed:
A — 4c OX* — plo 4jdl c£aU oyu
O’ 0*“^ ^ w*
$ SjS v & <% <% %■ &
p zl&j \y&> lj] jC^jL C-J\ £rjJ\
<rv Sj^) 4©
^And remember when you said to one who had received the
grace of Allah and your favour: ‘Keep [in wedlock] your
wife and fear Allah.’ But you did hid in your heart that
which Allah will make manifest. You feared the people, but
it is more befitting that you should fear Allah. Then when
Zayd had dissolved [his marriage] with her, We joined her
The days of Prophet Muhammad with his wives 43
in marriage to you in order that [in future] there may be no
difficulty to the believers in [the matter of] marriage with
the wives of their adopted sons, when the latter have
dissolved [their marriage] with them. And Allah’s
command must be fulfilled.]* (Qur’an 33: 37)
So, according to Allah’s command, the Prophet (jgg)
married Zaynab after she completed her waiting period. As was
the case with the Prophet’s previous wives, this marriage was not
the result of his personal desires, but rather it had important
implications for the Muslim Ummah (Nation or Community).
Because her marriage divinely ordained, Zaynab used to
boast to Prophet’s other wives by saying, “You were given in
marriage by your families, while I was married to the Prophet by
Allah from seven heavens above!”
Anas ( 4 ^) reported, “When the Prophet (0) married
Zaynab bint Jahsh, he offered a feast in which the people ate their
fill of meat and bread. Then he went out to the dwelling places of
the mothers of the believers (his wives), as he used to do on the
morning of his marriage. He would greet them and they would
invoke good for him. When he returned to his house, he found two
men talking to each other; when he saw them, he left his house
again. When those two men saw the Prophet (gg) leaving his
house, they quickly got up and departed. I do not remember
whether I informed him of their departure, or he was informed by
somebody else. So he returned and when he entered the house he
lowered the curtain between him and me. Then the verse of hijab
(veil) was revealed, as Allah ($g) says:
ji p Ji % H IjZ <£$
44 With Zaynab bint Jahsh
s . *> ^ , / _V./ c /, /
J o).
^ - > > > tt x tV *'\\ ^ v? ^v
U^ ** Uju lj)j (j^ l a 4jLi)j rt-^=^4
(or :^ij^vi s^)
Id Hiip 4&1 jcx^ oi^=>
^O you who believe! Enter not the Prophet’s houses —
unless permission is given to you — for a meal, [and then]
not [so early as] to wait for its preparation. But when you
are invited, enter; and when you have taken your meal,
disperse without sitting for talk. Verily, such [behaviour]
annoys the Prophet, and he is shy of asking you [to go]; but
Allah is not shy of [telling you] the truth. And when you ask
[his wives] for anything you want, ask them from behind a
screen: that is purer for your hearts and for theirs. Nor is it
right for you that you should annoy Allah’s Messenger, or
that you should ever marry his wives after him. Verily, such
a thing is an enormity in Allah’s sight.]) (Qur’an 33: 53)
This supported to what ‘Umar (4^,) had previously
suggested when he said, “O Messenger of Allah! Good people and
bad people enter your house. Would you allow the mothers of the
believers to have a veil?” So Allah ($g) revealed the verse of hijab
(veil); and from that time the veil was obligatory for Muslim
women.
The wives of the Prophet (|S) felt that Zaynab was very
close to him and understood the honour that Allah ($g) had given
her. ‘A’ishah used to have the strongest confidence regarding her
status in the eyes of Allah (gg) and His Messenger (jig), until she
said, “No woman used to compete with me except Zaynab.” She
The days of Prophet Muhammad with his wives 45
also said, indicating the status of Zaynab and Umm Salamah in the
eyes of the Prophet (j|§), “He loved them more than his other
wives, except for me, I suppose.”
‘A’ishah was very jealous because the Prophet (|g) used to
spend much time with Zaynab. So she went to her close friend,
Hafsah bint ‘Umar, and agreed secretly that if he comes to either
of them, she would say to him, “It seems you have eaten maghafir
(a kind of bad smelling raisin), for I smell on you the smell of
maghafir” They did so and he replied, “No, but I was drinking
honey in the house of Zaynab, the daughter of Jahsh, and I shall
never take it again. I have taken an oath as to that, and you should
not tell anybody about it.”
‘A’ishah said, “The wives of the Prophet (ij|) sent Fatimah,
the daughter of the Prophet (jjg), to him. She sought permission to
enter as he had been lying with me in my mantle. He gave her
permission and she said, ‘O Messenger of Allah, verily your
wives have sent me to you in order that you observe equity for
them and the daughter of Abu Qahafah.’ I kept quiet.” Thereupon
the Prophet (s||) said to Fatimah, ‘O my daughter, do not you love
whom I love?’ She said, ‘Yes (I do).’ He then said, ‘So love her
(that is ‘A’ishah).”’
After hearing this from the Messenger of Allah (g|),
Fatimah (t^) stood up and went to his wives to inform them of
what she had said to him and what he had replied. Thereupon they
said to her, “We think that you have been of no avail to us. You
may again go to the Prophet (j|j) and tell him that his wives seek
equity with the daughter of Abu Qahafah.” Fatimah replied, “By
Allah (§g), I will never talk to him about this matter.” ‘A’ishah
further reported, “The wives of Allah’s Messenger (^|) then sent
Zaynab bint Jahsh, and she was the one who was somewhat equal
46 With Zaynab bint Jahsh
in rank with me in the eyes of the Messenger of Allah (|j§). I have
never seen a woman more advanced in religious piety than
Zaynab, nor more God-conscious, more truthful, more loyal to the
ties of blood, more generous, more self-sacrificing, more
charitable, and thus more close to Allah the Exalted than her. She,
however, sometimes lost her temper quickly, but was soon calm.
The Prophet (a|g) permitted her to enter as I was along with him in
my mantle, in the same state when Fatimah had entered. She said,
‘O Messenger of Allah! Your wives have sent me to you seeking
equity with the daughter of Abu Qahafah.’ She then came to me
and showed harshness to me. I was looking at the eyes of the
Prophet (jg) to see whether he would permit me. Zaynab went on
until I came to know that the Prophet (jgg) would not disapprove if
I retorted. Then I exchanged hot words until I made her quit. The
Prophet (jg) smiled and said, ‘She is the daughter of Abu Bakr.’”
Zaynab lived the rest of her life as generous in worship and
giving in charity, and leaving no money after her death, but
having prepared her shroud before she died.
The Prophet (jgg) once gave good news to his wives by
telling them that the one amongst them with the longest hands
would be the first to join him after his death. By the longest hands
he meant the one who was most generous in giving charity.
Zaynab was indeed the first amongst the Prophet’s wives to die
after him (j|g). She died at the age of fifty-three years, twenty
years after the Prophet’s emigration to Madinah. ‘Umar (^)
performed the funeral prayer for her, and she was buried in
Baqee‘ 9 , may Allah be pleased with her.
9 The Baqee‘ Cemetery is located next to the Prophet’s Mosque in Madinah.
Many of the Prophet’s Companions and family members are buried here. (Editor)
WITH MAYMOONAH BINT HAMTH t«W
^he Prophet (%£) once said, “These four sisters are
believers: Maymoonah, Umm Fadl, Asma’ and Salma. Their
mother is Hind bint Zuhayr ibn Harith, the most honoured woman
in the world with regard to her sons-in-law.”
Her sons-in-law were: the Prophet (jgg), as the husband of
Maymoonah; Abu Bakr (4^,); Hamza and ‘Abbas, the Prophet’s
uncles; and Ja‘far and ‘Ali, the Prophet’s cousins.
Maymoonah was known as Maymoonah al-Hilalyyah, and
she became a widow when she was twenty-six years old. Her
original name was Barrah and the Prophet (|gj) renamed her
Maymoonah after he married her. She also had the most
honourable family amongst the Prophet’s wives.
The Messenger of Allah (s||) married her after he performed
‘umrah in Makkah, seven years after his emigration. He gave her
four hundred dirhams as a dowry and married her in Sarf, a place
between Makkah and Madinah. This was the place where she
asked to be buried. She died fifty-one years after the emigration of
the Prophet (%g).
Maymoonah reported several hadiths (traditions) of the
Prophet (s||); in fact, they were counted to be thirteen traditions in
the Saheehayn (Bukhari’s and Muslim’s books of Hadith) hadiths.
To describe the manners of the Prophet (§K) with
Maymoonah would be tantamount to describing his manners with
48 With Maymoonah bint Harith
all his wives, and indeed with all people he met. When asked
about the manners of the Prophet (|j§), ‘A’ishah said: “He never
used bad language. He used to say, ‘The best amongst you are
those who have the best manners and conduct.’”
Moreover, she used to say, “The Messenger of Allah (ig)
never hit a servant, and never struck with his hands except in
battle. He never used to seek revenge for himself except when
divinely forbidden acts were committed; and even then he would
seek revenge only for the sake of Allah (j|g). When he had a
choice between two things, he used to choose the easier one if it
was not forbidden; for if it were so, he would be the first to avoid
it. Moreover, when he used to sit with one of his wives, he would
use the softest speech and was a most generous husband, ever-
smiling and at times engaging his sense of humour.”
We now return to our discussion about the Mother of the
Believers, Maymoonah, for ‘A’ishah has described in relation to
the other wives by saying, “She was the most righteous amongst
us (in the sense that she was) and the first to take care of kin
relations.”
Some scholars reported that Umm al-Fadl, Maymoonah’ s
sister and ‘Abbas’s wife, talked to her husband about suggesting
the marriage of her sister to the Prophet (j|g). This is why it was
said that she offered herself to the Prophet (|{g); the following
verse is actually talked about her:
4 ... And a believing woman if she offers herself to the
Prophet, and if the Prophet wishes to marry her, a privilege
The days of Prophet Muhammad with his wives 49
for you only, not for the [rest of] the believers....)?
(Qur’an 33: 50)
When the Prophet (jg) knew of this, he sent Aws ibn
Khawlah and Abu Rafee‘ to his uncle, ‘Abbas, expressing his
acceptance of this marriage. When Maymoonah saw the two men,
she felt very happy and comforted. He married her in the month of
Shawwal, seven years after his emigration.
After many years of a blessed life, and in the time of Yazeed
ibn Mu'awiyah, Maymoonah died at the age of eighty.
WITH SAFIYYAH !<&)
JUe t us begin our look at Safiyyah with account of her life
that she herself narrated. She said, “I was my father’s favourite
daughter and my uncle’s favourite niece; they used to take me
with them wherever and whenever they could. However, when the
Prophet (3H) came to Madinah and resided in the home of ‘Amr
ibn ‘Awf, my father, Huyayy ibn Akhtab, went with his brother to
meet him before sunrise, but did not come back until sunset.
When I saw them coming they surprised me because they used to
smile at me as I used to wait for them. But this time they returned
looking very tired and frustrated, and I heard my uncle asking my
father, ‘Is he the one?’ And my father replied, ‘Yes, by Allah it is
him.’ Then my uncle asked, ‘Can you prove it?’ My father replied,
‘Yes, I can.’ My uncle said, ‘What do you feel about it?’ And he
replied, ‘I cannot but hate him as long as I am alive.’”
Let us go back to Safiyyah and get to know her more
closely. She is Safiyyah bint Huyayy ibn Akhtab, was a Jewish
woman whose father was a descendent of Haroon ($=js), the
Messenger of Allah, and whose mother was from a Jewish tribe
called Quraydhah. She was married twice before she got married
to the Prophet (§£). Her first husband was an honoured man
amongst his people, and so was she.
The story of her marriage to the Prophet (|g) began when he
decided to go to Khaybar and to strike some fortresses belonging
to the Jews. One of these was the fortress of Qamoos, which
belonged to her husband Ibn al-Haqeeq.
52 With Safiyyah
The Muslims won that battle and had many captives, one of
them was Safiyyah, whom the Prophet ( 0 ) chose to be his.
In this battle, Safiyyah lost her father, her brother, and her
husband. The Prophet (jg§) could have taken her as a female slaves
if he had been simply been seeking pleasure; however, he set her
free and married her. He did this as a conciliation to honour her
after her humiliation, as was his practice. Imam Ahmad reported
that the Prophet (j||) gave her the choice between setting her free
and then marrying her, or going back to her people. She chose to
be his wife, and her dowry was her freedom.
After the battle was over, on the way back to Madinah, the
Prophet (s|g) wanted to sleep with his wife Safiyyah, but she
refused to do that. When they reached As-Sahba’, he felt that she
was ready for that. When he asked her about the reason she did not
accept for her initial refusal, she answered, “I was afraid because
Jews were close to us.” She was seventeen years old at that time.
This honoured woman died after spending many years in
the noble house of the Prophet (jg;). She died during the caliphate
of Mu‘awiyah during the month of Ramadan, fifty years after the
emigration, and was buried in the Baqee 4 Cemetery.
WITH UMM AL-MASAKEEN
‘ 6ibaydah ibn al-Harith ibn ‘Abdul-Muttalib was martyred
in the battle of Badr and left behind him a widow, Zaynab bint
Khuzaymah, who grieved his loss, yet was proud of his
martyrdom. ‘Ubaydah was one of the Prophet’s cousins, so the
Prophet (jH) honoured him and his widow by marrying Zaynab.
In his marriage to her, the Prophet (jg|) provided her with great
care and enduring mercy.
Zaynab was very generous and merciful, and was
particularly so towards the poor. Because of this, she has given the
name Umm al-Masakeen, which means the mother of the poor.
She joined the Prophet’s household soon after Hafsah did, and
lived there for a few months. She died in the month of Rabee* al-
Akhir, four years after the emigration, and was buried then in
Baqee* Cemetery, as all the mothers of the believers were.
Because of her short stay with them, the other wives were not
troubled by Zaynab’s presence. In fact, she left them with positive
memories and a favourable impression. Zaynab’s absence from
the noble house now left a place for the wise and righteous Umm
Salamah.
WITH UMM SAIAMAH
Cvhe had a very strong personality and was characterized
by her willpower. In addition, she was known for her wisdom,
which far superceded that of her female contemporaries. This
comes as no surprise, given that she was the daughter of generous,
honourable people. Her father was a man whom people called Zad
ar-Rakb, which means, ‘the supplier of the travellers’. He earned
this title because when travelled, he used to take with him the
needs and provisions of his accompanying travellers. In fact, he
would not let any of the travellers bring any supplies with them.
Umm Salamah’s full name was Hind bint Abi Umayyah ibn
al-Mugheera. She was a beautiful and intelligent woman who
belonged to the Makhzoom tribe of Quraysh. If you read about the
two emigrations to Abyssinia and Madinah, you will find that she
is mentioned. Furthermore, if you inquire about the Battle of
Uhud and the Treaty of Hudaybiyah, you will hear something
about her wisdom.
She and her husband, Abu Salamah ‘Abdullah ibn al-Asad,
were among the few people who embraced Islam in its early days.
The oppression Quraysh against the Muslims was mounting, and
many were tortured to give up their religion, but none did. A few
months later, the Prophet (j|g) allowed those who feared
Quraysh’s violence to emigrate to Abyssinia as its king was
known to be a just man who never oppressed anybody. Many
Muslims went there, and Umm Salamah and her husband were
amongst them.
56 With Umm Salamah
The Muslims in Abyssinia used to receive news about the
state of Islam and Muslims in Makkah. At one point, they
received news that the number of Muslims was increasing rapidly
and that Islam was spreading all over that region. Some of the
emigrants, including Umm Salamah and her husband, felt that it
was time to go back to their homeland. On their way back, they
realized that the news they had heard were not accurate, that
Quraysh ’s oppression was indeed escalating, and that the violence
had became unbearable. Some of them decided to go their way
back, while others, including Umm Salamah and her husband,
decided to go forward no matter what the consequences would be.
Abu Salamah decided to ask for the protection of his uncle
Abu Talib (Prophet’s uncle), also the Prophet’s uncle and an
unbeliever, to support him against Quraysh. However, the
Makhzoom tribe condemned Abu Talib’s protection of his
nephew. They went to Abu Talib in an attempt to prevent him
from protecting Abu Salamah and to persuade him to ask Abu
Salamah to give up Islam. They said to Abu Talib, “You have
protected Muhammad against us, so let us have our son Abu
Salamah.”
Abu Talib said, “As I have protected my nephew
Muhammad, why should I not protect the son of my sister.” A few
months later Abu Talib died and Abu Salamah and his wife, along
with the Prophet (j jSj) and other Muslims, were exposed to
oppression again.
Umm Salamah was the heroine of a sad tragedy. When
Quraysh were persecuting the Muslims, she decided to emigrate
with her husband and her young son to Madinah. On the way, her
tribe intercepted them and prevented her husband from taking her,
saying, “You own yourself and we cannot prevent you from what
The days of Prophet Muhammad with his wives 57
you want; but this woman belongs to us and we will not let her go
with you.” In retaliation, her husband’s tribe decided to take away
her little son. They said, “By Allah we will not let her take the
child since you took her away from her husband.” The two tribes
pulled at the child’s arm, until it was dislocated. Finally, her
husband’s people were able to take the child away, and her
husband had to leave for Madinah without her. They separated her
from her husband and her child, and each was alone. Being alone
and deprived of her husband and child for more than a year, she
used to sit on the outskirts of Makkah and cry from morning until
evening. She would not give up Islam, nor could she forget her
husband and her child.
One day a passer-by had pity on her and continued to insist
with her tribe until they agreed to allow her to join her husband.
Then and only then did her husband’s people return her son to her.
She prepared her camel and held her child, then left to meet her
husband in Madinah. When she reached an-Na‘eem (a place near
Makkah), she met ‘Uthman ibn Abi Talhah, who was at that time a
disbeliever. He said, “Where are you going O daughter of Abi
Umayyah?”
She said, “I am going to meet my husband in Madinah.”
He said, “Are you alone?”
She said, “Yes, except for Allah (§jg) and my son.”
He said, “By Allah I will not let you go by yourself.”
So he took the halter of the camel and went with her, Umm
Salamah says of him, “He was the most generous man I have ever
met among the Arabs. When we wanted to rest, he used to go
away from me after he sit my camel down and then to go sit
58 With Umm Salamah
beneath a tree, leaving me alone. Then when we wanted to
continue on our trip, he would prepare my camel and then turn his
back to me saying, ‘Ride.’”
They finally reached the village of Bani ‘ Awf, a village near
Madinah, where Abu Salamah was staying at the time. ‘Uthman
said to her, “Your husband is in this village, go there and may
Allah bless you.” He then returned back to Makkah. Because of
this incident, Umm Salamah used to remember this man by
saying, “By Allah I have never seen a family that was afflicted
like ours, and I have never seen a more generous travel companion
than ‘Uthman ibn Abi Talhah.”
In Madinah, she gave birth to the rest of her children: ‘ Amr,
Durrah and Zaynab. One day, while she was sitting with her
husband, she said to him, “Let us make a deal that you will not
marry after I die and I will not marry after you die.” He said, “Will
you obey me?” She said, “Since you are my husband then I must
obey you.” He said, “Then, if I die, get married.” Then he said,
“O Allah! Grant Umm Salamah a husband after I die who is better
than me.”
Abu Salamah was a brave soldier of Allah (§g) who fought
valiantly at Uhud and was also given command of an operation
against Bani Asad. He was able to defeat Bani Asad and prevent
their raid on Madinah, but the exertion reopened a wound that he
had sustained at Uhud, and he died of that wound after returning
to Madinah. The Prophet (jjj§) sat by his deathbed until the last
moment and prayed for him. He was very sad about him, so he
grieved and said, ‘ Allahu Akbar (Allah is the Greatest)’ nine times
during his funeral prayer. Some Muslims asked the Prophet (|j|),
“Have you forgotten O Messenger of Allah?”
The days of Prophet Muhammad with his wives 59
He (Jg) said: “I have not forgotten nor was made to forget at
all; and even if I said Allahu Akbar for Abu Salamah a thousand
times, he would deserve that.”
Some months later, to honour his name according to the
custom of the Arabs, Abu Bakr (4^,) sent to ask for the hand of
Umm Salamah in marriage, but she gently refused. Next, ‘Umar
ibn al-Khattab asked for her hand, but he also was refused. She
was a widow, alone, with many children and without any
resources. Abu Salamah left nothing to support them except Allah
(*£g). She could not be left in this plight, so Muhammad (j|§) asked
for her hand, and again she apologized to the emissary he had sent
her, saying that she was old, of a jealous nature, and had many
children. The reply of the Prophet (jgj) was: “As for you having a
jealous nature, then Allah will cast jealousy out of your heart; as
for you being old, then I am older than you; as for the children,
they belong to me as they belong to you.”
After the Messenger of Allah (jg) made peace with
Quraysh at the Treaty of Hudaybiyah, he informed his
Companions that they would have to return to Madinah and come
back the following year to perform circumambulation around the
Ka‘bah. He then instmcted them to get up, slaughter their
sacrifices and cut their hair. No one got up. The Prophet (jgjj)
repeated his instructions three times; however, because the
Companions were very upset with the terms of the Treaty, they
did not respond.
When none of them got up, he left them and went to Umm
Salamah and told her of the people’s attitude towards him. Umm
Salamah said, “O Messenger of Allah! Do you want your order to
be carried out? Go out and do not say a word to anybody until you
have slaughtered your sacrifice and called a barber to cut your
60 With Umm Salamah
hair.” So, the Prophet (jg) went out and did not talk to anyone of
them until he slaughtered the sacrifice and called a barber to give
him a haircut. Seeing that, the Companions of the Prophet (gg) got
up, slaughtered their sacrifices, and started cutting one another’s
hair. In fact, they were in such a rush to emulate the Prophet (gg)
that they were at risk of cutting one another’s skin.
Umm Salamah died in Madinah after the Battle of Karbala’
sixty-one years after the emigration, and she was buried in the
Baqee* Cemetery.
Although this reasonable minded and intelligent mother of
the believers was now gone, she left behind her many lessons for
other women to take as examples. May Allah have mercy on
Umm Salamah and let her residence be immortal in paradise.
GLOSSARY OF ISLAMIC TERMS *
ALBaqee V
Al-Hijab
^LJ-I
AUahu Akbar
jg\ <JJI
As-Salam
Dinar
jlji
Farooq
Hajj
er
‘Iddah
oOP
Jahiliyah
aJuU-
Cemetery of the Companions in
Madinah
Veil commanded for Muslim
women
Allah is All-Great
A greeting (meaning peace)
Coins, units of currency
The separating sword, title given
to the Companion ‘Umar for his
services to the cause of Islam
Pilgrimage to Makkah between
8th to 13th of Dhul-Hajj, a rite and
pillar of Islam
The time that the divorced/widow
woman has to spend before she
can marry again
Lit. ignorance; Time before Islam,
non-Islamic
* The Arabic words are transliterated according to the conventions of the
Transliteration Chart found in this book. If a word has become part of the
English language (i.e., is found in a dictionary of Standard English), that
spelling is used in this book and appears first in this Glossary, with the
transliterated form in brackets after it.
62 Glossary of Islamic terms
Jihad
: Lit. struggle, Islamically struggle
for the supremacy of Islamic order,
holy war
Kaaba
kfS : The Holy House in Makkah
Maghafir
^U. : A kind of bad smelling raisin
Namoos
: The title, another name of the
archangel Jibreel, (Gabriel), the
angel entrusted with the divine
message
Qasab
: Evacuated pearl
Saheehayn
: Name applied to the two hadith
books: Bukhari and Muslim,
known as the most authentic
anthology of hadiths — record of
the Prophet’s speech, actions, and
approvals
Notes
Notes
THE DAYS
OF
PROPHET M UHAMMAD
WITH HIS WIVES
MtRNATiONAL ISLAMIC PUBLISHING HOUSE
Muhammad the last Messenger of Allah was sent with the last and
everlasting divine message for the mankind as a whole for all times
to come. The message covers all aspects of human life and the
Prophet was the perfect role model. He was the living example for
the people fashioning their lives according to divine guidance. The
husband-wife relationship is one of the most important aspects of
human life. The Prophet set the glaring example in this field as well.
Any Muslim, desirous of attaining pleasure of Allah, should follow
his footsteps. This booklet provides a detailed account of the
behaviour of the last Messenger with his wives. It guides the reader
how to behave properly with his beloved wife.
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