al-Furqan
At a time in which the Muslims are beset with trials from every preriphery and within, comes this heartening blog rooted in the commandments of Allah, Azzawajall (the Exalted), the Sunnah, the excellent guidance and examples of the Muslims that came before us. This blog, the culmination of deep and organized thought says to you in short: “Be happy, at peace, and joyful; and enjoy reading.” - Najeeb Yunusa Hassan
Saturday, January 9, 2016
Thursday, October 15, 2015
SALMAAN AL-FAARISIY (The Seeker after Truth)
Verily all praise is for Allah,
we praise Him and seek His aid, and we ask for His forgiveness, and we seek
refuge in Allah from the evils of our own selves and from our evil deeds.
Whomsoever Allah has guided, none can misguide him, and whomsoever Allah has
misguided, none can guide him, and I testify that none has the right to be
worshiped except Allah, without any partner, and I testify that Muhammad is His
servant and Messenger.
While reading this, we cannot
help but be moved by the lives of the Companions herein depicted. How we long
to have their awe and reverence for Allah! How we long to spend the same hours
in worship as they! How we long to be as brave as they were in the face of
danger! How we long to be as patient as they were under torture! It is my
hope that this will fulfill a need for the English speaking Muslim to learn
more about that first generation of Muslims. Indeed the Companions - those men
and women who were contemporaneous with the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) -- inspire
and encourage us. Read these stories and share them with your children, for
these Companions are a part of our Islamic heritage that will, Allah willing,
strengthen us as a nation if we try to follow their examples.
To proceed, SALMAAN AL-FAARISIY (The Seeker after Truth)
From Persia comes our hero this time, and from Persia many
came to embrace Islam in the long run, and it made some of them extraordinary,
unsurpassable in faith and knowledge in religion and worldly affairs.
It is one of the wonders of Islam and its greatness that it
never enters a country on Allah's earth but that it exerts invaluable influence
on all its potentialities and forces, bringing forth the latent genius of its
people and followers. From there came forth Muslim philosophers, physicians,
jurists, astronomers, inventors, and mathematicians.
Behold, they reached all
heights, broke all frontiers, until the first era of Islam flourished with
great geniuses in all fields of intellectual activity such as administration
and science. Verily, they came from various nations, but their religion
remained one.
The Prophet (PBUH) had prophesied this blessed spread of his
religion. Indeed, he had been so promised by his Almighty Lord. He had pointed
to the time, place, and day, and he had seen in his mind's eye the banner of
Islam fluttering in all comers of the earth and over the palaces of its earthly
rulers.
Salmaan Al-Faarisiy (The Persian) bore witness to this and was
firmly connected with what happened. That was on the Day of Al Khandaq (The
Trench) in the year A.H. 5, when the leaders of the Jews approached Makkah to
stir up the polytheists and form an alliance against the Prophet (PBUH) and the
Muslims, asking the polytheists to enter upon a treaty for decisive battle to
eradicate this new religion.
The ungodly war was planned: the Quraish army and allies would
attack Al-Madiinah from outside, while the Bani Ouraidhah would attack from
within, behind the ranks of the Muslims, who would then fall prey and be
crushed. One day the Prophet (PBUH) and the Muslims were taken unaware by a
huge well-armed army marching on Al-Madiinah. The Qur'aan depicts the scene
thus: "When they came against you from above you and from below you and
your eyes turned away and your hearts reached to your throats, and you imagined
vain thoughts about GOD; in that place the believers were tried and shaken most
severely" (33:10-11).
Twenty-four thousand fighters under the command of Abu Sufyaan
and `Uyainah lbn Hisn were advancing on Al-Madiinah to storm it and to lay
siege to it in order to get rid of Muhammad, his religion, and his Companions.
This army did not represent the Quraish alone, for they were in alliance with
all the tribes, and all had vested interests that were threatened by Islam. It
was a last and decisive attempt embarked on by all the enemies of the Prophet
(PBUH), based upon individual, collective, and tribal interests.
The Muslims found themselves in a precarious situation. The
Prophet (PBUH) assembled his Companions for consultation. Certainly they were
gathered to reach a decision on defense and battle, but how could they put up a
defense? And then a long - legged man with flowing hair for whom the Prophet
(PBUH) bore great love, Salmaan Al-Faarisiy, held up his head and took a look
at Al Madiinah, which was surrounded by hills, mountains, and exposed open
country which could be easily broken through by the enemy.
Salmaan had much experience, in warfare and its tactics in his
native Persia. So he proposed to the Prophet (PBUH) something which the Arabs
had never seen before in warfare. It was the digging of a trench in the exposed
places around Al- Madiinah.
And Allah knows what could have been the position of the
Muslims in that battle had they not dug the trench, which was no sooner seen by
the Quraish than they were stunned by despair. The forces of the enemy still
remained in their tents for a month, unable to take Al-Madiinah, until Allah
sent them one night a storm which devastated their tents and tore them
asunder.
Then Abu Sufyaan announced to his forces that they should
return to where they had come from. They were despondent and frustrated.
During the excavation of the trench, Salmaan took his place
among the Muslims while they dug and removed the sand. The Prophet (PBUH) was
also taking part in digging where Salmaan was working in a group. Their
pickaxes could not smash a stubborn rock, in spite of the fact that Salmaan was
of strong build and hard working. A single stroke of his would break a rock to
pieces, but he stood in front of this stubborn one. He let all those around him
try to break it, but in vain. Salmaan went to the Prophet (PBUH) to ask him to
divert the trench around that stubborn and challenging rock. The Prophet (PBUH)
returned with Salmaan to see the rock himself. When he saw it, he called for a
pickax and asked the Companions to keep back from the splinters. He said,
"In the name of Allah," and then raised his blessed, firm hands
gripping the pickax and let it fall.
The rock broke, making a great light. Salmaan said that he
himself saw that light shining upon AlMadiinah. The Prophet (PBUH) raised the
pickax and gave a second blow and the rock broke more. At that moment the
Prophet (PBUH) said loudly, "Allahu akbar - Allah is the Greatest - I have
been given the keys to Rome; its red palaces have been lit for me and my nation
has vanquished it."
The Prophet (PBUH) struck his third blow. Then the rock
shattered and its glittering light was seen! The Prophet (PBUH) told them that
he was now looking at the palaces of Syria, San'aa' and others like them, and
the cities of the world over which the banner of Islam would flutter one day.
The Muslims shouted in deep faith, "This is what Allah and His Prophet
have promised us!"
Salmaan was the originator of the project to dig the trench,
and he was associated with the rock out of which poured some secrets of the
unseen and of destiny. When he called the Prophet (PBUH) to break it, he stood
by the side of the Prophet (PBUH), saw the light, and heard the glad omen, and
he lived to see the prophecy fulfilled and abided in its living reality. He saw
the great capitals of Persia and Rome (Byzantium), the palaces of San'aa',
Syria, Egypt, and Iraq. He saw every place trembling with the blessed ecstasy
which was issuing forth from the high minarets in all parts of the world,
spreading the light of guidance and goodness.
And here he is sitting there in the shade of a tree before his
house in Al-Madiinah telling his guests about his great adventures in the quest
for truth, explaining to them how he abandoned the religion of his Persian
people for Christianity and then for Islam. How he abandoned his father's
wealth and estate and threw himself into the arms of the wilderness in the
quest for the release of his tension and soul. How he was sold in a slave
market on his way to search for truth. How he met with the Prophet (PBUH) and
how he came to believe in him. Now let us approach his great court and listen
to his grand tale which he is recounting.
I come from Isfahan, from a place called Jai, and I was the
most beloved son of my father, who was a figure of high esteem among his
people. We used to worship fire. I devoted myself to fire worship until I
became custodian of the fire which we lit and never allowed to be
extinguished.
My father had an estate. One day, he sent me there. I passed
by a Christian church and heard them praying. I went in and saw what they were
doing. I was impressed by what I saw in their prayers. I said, "This is
better than our religion." I did not leave them until sunset, nor did I go
to my father's estate, nor did I return to my father until he sent people to
search for me.
I asked the Christians about their affair and prayers which
impressed me, and about the origin of their religion. They answered, "In
Syria." I said to my father when I returned to him, "I passed by
people praying in a church of theirs, and I was impressed by their prayer, and
I could see that their religion is better than ours." He questioned me and
I questioned him, and then he put fetters on my feet and locked me up.
Then I sent to the Christians saying I had entered their
religion, and I requested that whenever a caravan came from Syria, they should
tell me before its return in order for me to travel with them, and so they
did.
I broke loose from the iron fetters and went away. I set out
with them for Syria. While I was there, I asked about their learned man, and I
was told that he was the bishop, leader of the church. I went to him and told
him my story. I lived with him, serving, praying, and learning.
But this bishop was not faithful in his religion, because he
used to gather money from the people to distribute it, but he would keep it for
himself. Then he died.
They appointed a new leader in his place. I have never seen a
man more godly than he in his religion, nor more active in his bid for the
Hereafter, nor more pious in the world, nor more punctual at worship. I loved
him more than I had ever loved any other person before.
When his fate came, I asked him, "To whom would you
recommend me? And to whom would you leave me?" He said, "O my son, I
do not know anyone who is on the path I am and who leads the kind of life I
lead, except a certain man in Mosul."
When he died, I went to that man in Mosul, and told him the
story, and I stayed with him as long as Allah wished me to stay. Then death
approached him. So I asked him, "To whom would you advise me to go
to?" He directed me to a pious man in Nisiibiin." So I went to him
and told him my story. I stayed with him as long as Allah wished me to stay.
When death overtook him, I asked him as before. He told me to meet a person at
`Amuriah in Byzantium. So, to Byzantium I went and stayed with that man,
earning my living there by rearing cattle and sheep.
Then death approached him, and I asked him, "To whom
should I go?" He said, "O my son, I know no one anywhere who is on
the path we have been on so that I can tell you to go to him. But you have been
overtaken by an epoch in which there will appear a prophet in the pure creed of
lbraahiim (Abraham). He will migrate to the place of palm trees. If you can be
sincere to him, then do so. He has signs which will be manifested: he does not
eat of charity, yet he accepts gifts, and between his shoulders is the seal of
prophethood. When you see him, you will know him."
A caravan passed by me on that day. I asked them where they
had come from and learned that they were from the Arabian Peninsula. So I told
them, "I give you these cattle and sheep of mine in return for your taking
me to your land." They agreed. So they took me in their company until they
brought me to Wadi Al-Quraa and there they wronged to me. They sold me to a
Jew. I saw many palm trees and cherished the hope that it was the land that had
been described to me and which would be the future place of the advent of the
prophet, but it was not.
I stayed with this Jew who bought me until another from Bani
Quraidhah came to him one day and bought me from him. I stayed with him until
we came to Al -Madiinah. By Allah, I had hardly seen it when I knew that it was
the land described to me.
I stayed with the Jew, working for him on his plantation in
Bani Quraidhah until Allah sent His Prophet, who later emigrated to Al-Madiinah
and dismounted at Qubaa' among the Bani `Amr lbn `Awf.
Indeed, one day, I was at the top of a palm tree with my
master sitting below it when a Jewish man came. He was a cousin of his and said
to him, "May Allah destroy Bani Qubaa'. They are spreading a rumor about a
man at Qubaa' who came from Makkah claiming that he is a prophet." By
Allah, he had hardly said it, when I was seized by a tremor, and the palm tree
shook until I almost fell on my master.
I climbed down quickly saying, "What are you saying? What
news?" My master gave me a nasty slap and said, `What have you got to do
with this? Return to your work!"
So, I returned to work. At nightfall I gathered what I had and
went out until I came to the Prophet (PBUH) at Qubaa'. I entered and found him
sitting with some of his Companions. Then I said, "You are in need and a stranger.
I have some food which I intend to give out as charity. When they showed me
your lodgings, I thought you most deserve it, so I have come to you with
it." I put the food down. The Prophet (PBUH) said to his Companions,
"Eat in the name of Allah." He abstained and never took of it. I said
to myself, "This, by Allah, is one sign. He does not eat of
charity!"
I returned to meet the Prophet (PBUH) again the next day,
carrying some food, and said to him (PBUH), "I can see that you do not
partake of charity. I have something which I want to give to you as a
present." I placed it before him. He said to his Companions "Eat in
the name of Allah" and he ate with them. So I said to myself, "This
indeed is the second sign. He eats of presents." I returned and stayed
away for a while. Then I came to him, and I saw him sitting, having returned
from a burial, and surrounded by his Companions. He had two garments, carrying
one on his shoulder and wearing the other. I greeted him, then bent to see the
upper part of his back. He knew what I was looking for, so he threw aside his
garment off his shoulder and, behold, the sign between his shoulders, the seal
of Prophethood, was clear just as the Christian monk had described."
At once, I staggered towards him, kissing him and weeping. He
called to me to come forward and I sat before him. I told him my story as you
have already heard me describe the events.
When I became a Muslim, slavery prevented me from taking part
in the battles of Badr and Uhud.
Therefore the Prophet (PBUH) advised me, "Go into terms
with your master for him to free you," and so I did. The Prophet (PBUH)
told the Companions to assist me, and Allah freed me from bondage. I became a
free Muslim, taking part with the Prophet (PBUH) in the Battle of Al-khandaq
and others. With these simple clear words, Salmaan spoke of his great, noble, and
sacrificial adventure for the sake of Allah, seeking after the reality of
religion that led him to Allah and helped him to find his role in this
life.
What kind of a noble person was this man? What great
superiority was achieved by his aspiring spirit, that restless spirit that
withstood difficulties and defeated them, confronted the impossible and it gave
way! What devotion to the truth, and what sincerity that led its owner
voluntarily away from the estate of his father, with all its wealth and luxury,
to the wilderness, with all its difficulties and suffering. He moved from land
to land, town to town, seeking acquaintances, persevering, worshiping and
searching for his destiny among people, sects, and different ways of life. And
adhering all the way to the truth with all its noble sacrifices, for the sake
of guidance until he was sold into slavery. He was then rewarded by Allah the
best of rewards, making him reach the truth and come into the presence of His
Prophet. And then He granted him longevity, enough for him to see the banner of
Islam fluttering in all parts of the world and His Muslim worshippers filling
its space and corners with guidance, progress and justice!
What do you expect of the Islam of a man with such a noble
character but to be a man of such truth! It was an Islam of the God- fearing
and innocent. In his devotion he was intelligent, pious, and the person nearest
to `Umar Ibn Al-khattaab.
He once stayed with Abu Ad-Dardaa', under the same roof. Abu
Ad-Dardaa' used to pray all night and fast all day. Salmaan blamed him for this
excessive worship. One day, Salmaan wanted to stop him from fasting and to say
it was supererogatory. Abu Ad-Dardaa' asked him, "Would you prevent me
from fasting for my Lord and from praying to Him?" Salmaan replied,
"No, your eyes have a claim upon you, your family has a claim upon you, so
fast intermittently, then pray and sleep."
This reached the Prophet (PBUH) who said, "Salmaan is,
indeed, full of knowledge." The Prophet (PBUH) was often impressed by his
wisdom and knowledge, just as he was impressed by his character and religion.
On the Day of Al-khandaq the Ansar stood up and said, "Salmaan is of
us," the Muhaajiruun stood up also and said, "Salmaan is of us."
The Prophet called to them saying, "Salmaan is of us, O People of the
House (Prophet's house)."
Indeed, he deserved this honor! `Aliy lbn Abi Taalib , (May
Allah honor his face) nicknamed him "Luqmaan the Wise ". He was asked
about after his death: "There was a man who was of the People of the
House. Who among you is like Luqmaan the Wise? He was a man of knowledge who
absorbed all the scriptures of the People of the Book. He was like a sea that
was never exhausted!"
He was held in the minds of Prophet's Companions with all
highest regards and in the greatest position and respect. During the Caliphate
of `Umar, he came to Al-Madiinah on a visit and `Umar accorded him what he had
never accorded to anyone before when he assembled his Companions and said,
"Come, let us go out and welcome Salmaan!" They received him at the
border of Al-Madiinah. Salmaan had lived with the Prophet (PBUH) ever since he
met him, and believed in him as a free Muslim, and worshiped with him. He lived
during the Caliphate of Abu Bakr, `Umar and `Uthmaan, in whose era he met his
Lord. In most of these years, the banner of Islam spread everywhere, and the
treasures of Islam were carried to Al Madiinah in floods and distributed to the
people in the form of regular allowance and fixed salaries. The
responsibilities of ruling increased on all fronts, as well as duties and the
overwhelming burden of holding official posts. So where did Salmaan stand in
this respect? Where do we see him in the time of splendor, plenty, and
enjoyment?
Open wide your eyes. Do you see that humble man sitting there
in the shade making baskets and utensils out of palm fronds?
That is Salmaan. Take a good look at him. Look at his short
garment, which is so short that it is only down to his knees. That was him in
grand old age. His grant was 4,000 to 6,000 dirhams a year, but he distributed
all of it, refusing to take a dirham of it, and he used to say, "I would
buy palm fronds with one dirham to work on and then sell it for three dirhams.
I retained one dirham of it as capital, spent one dirham on my family, and gave
away one dirham, and if `Umar lbn Al-Khattaab prevented me from that, I would
not stop."
What next, O followers of Muhammad? What next, O noblest of
mankind in all ages? Some of us used to think, whenever we heard the conduct of
the Companions and their piety - for example, Abu Bakr, `Umar, Abu Dhar and
their brethren - that it was based on the life of the Arabian Peninsula, where
the Arabs find pleasure in simplicity. And here we are before a man from
Persia, the land of pleasure, luxury, and civilization, and he was not of the
poor but of its upper class. What about him now refusing property, wealth, and
enjoyment, and insisting that he live on one dirham a day from the work of his
hands? How about his refusing leadership and position except for something
relating to jihaad and only if none but he were suitable for it, and it was
forced upon him, and he accepted it weeping and shy? How about when he accepted
leadership which was forced upon him but he refused to take his lawful dues?
Hishaam lbn Hasaan relates from Al-Hassan: The allowance of Salmaan was 5,000.
He lived among 30,000 people and used to dress in a garment cut into halves. He
wore one and sat on the other half. Whenever his allowance was due him, he
distributed it to the needy and lived on the earnings of his hands!
Why do you think he was doing all this work and worshiping
with all this devotion, and yet he was a Persian child of luxury, the upbringing
of civilization? You can hear the reply from him. While he was on his deathbed,
the great spirit mounting forth to meet his Lord, Exalted and Merciful, Sa`d
lbn Abi Waqaas went to greet him, and Salmaan wept! Sa'd said, "What makes
you weep, O Abu `Abd Allah? The Prophet of Allah died pleased with you!"
Salmaan replied, "By Allah, I am not weeping in fear of death, nor for
love of the world. But the Prophet of Allah put me on an oath. He said, `Let
any of you have in this world like the provision of the traveler,' and here I
have owned many things around me." Sa'd said: I looked around, and I saw
nothing but a water-pot and vessel to eat in! Then I said to him, "O Abu
Abd Allah, give us a parting word of advice for us to follow." He said, O
Sa'd, remember Allah for your cares, if you have any. Remember Allah in your
judgment, if you judge. Remember Allah when you distribute the share."
This was the man who filled his spirit with riches just as it filled him with
renunciation of the pleasures of this world, its riches, and pride. The oath
which he and the rest of the Companions had taken before the Prophet of Allah
was that they must not let the world possess them and that they should take
nothing from it but the provision of the traveler in his bag.
Salmaan had kept the oath, yet still his tears ran when he saw
his soul preparing for departure, fearing that he had gone beyond the limits.
There was nothing around him except a vessel to eat in and a water-pot and yet
still he considered himself lavish! Did I not tell you that he was the nearest
in resemblance to `Umar? During the days of his rule over the Madiinah area, he
never changed his way. He had refused, as we have seen, to receive his salary
as a ruler, but went on making baskets to earn his living. His dress was no
more than a gown, resembling his old clothes in simplicity.
One day while on the
road, he met a man arriving from Syria, carrying a load of figs and dates. The
load was too heavy for him and made him weary. No sooner did the Syrian see the
man in front of him, who appeared to be one of the common people and poor than
he thought of putting the load on his shoulders and when he reached his
destination he would give him something for his labor. So he beckoned to the
man (Salmaan, the governor), and he came up to him. The Syrian said to him,
"Relieve me of this load." He carried it, and they walked
together.
While on their way, they met a group of people. He greeted
them and they stood up in obeisance, replying, "And unto the governor be
peace!" "Who is the governor?" The Syrian asked himself. His
surprise increased when he saw some of them rushing towards Salmaan to take the
load off his shoulders. "Let us carry it, O governor". When the
Syrian knew that he was the governor of Al Madiinah, he was astonished. Words
of apology and regret fell from his lips, and he went forward to grab the load.
But Salmaan shook his head in refusal, saying, "No, not until I take you
to your destination."
He was asked one day, "What troubles you in the
leadership?" He replied, "The pleasure of nurturing it and the
bitterness of meaning!"
A friend of his came to him one day at his house and found him
kneading dough. He asked him, "Where is your servant? "He replied, We
have sent her on an errand and we hate to charge her with two
duties."
When we say "his house" let us remember what kind of
house it was. When Salmaan thought of building it, he asked the mason,
"How are you going to build it?" The mason was courteous and yet
witty. He knew the piety and devotion of Salmaan, so he replied to him
saying "Fear not. It is a house for
you to protect yourself against the heat of the sun and dwell in the cold weather.
When you stand erect in it, it touches your head." Salmaan said to him,
"Yes, that is it, so go on and build it."
There was nothing of the goods of this world which could
attract Salmaan for a moment, nor did they leave any traces in his heart except
one thing, which he was particularly mindful of and had entrusted to his wife,
requesting her to keep it far away in a safe place. In his last sickness, and
in the morning on which he gave up his soul, he called her, "Bring me the
trust which I left in safe keeping!"
She brought it and behold, it was a bottle of musk. He had
gained it on the day of liberating the city of Jalwalaa' and kept it to be his
perfume on the day of his death. Then he called for a pot of water, sprinkled
the musk into it, stirred it with his hand and then said to his wife,
"Sprinkle it on me, for there will now come to me creatures from the
creatures of Allah. They do not eat food and what they like is
perfume."
Having done so he said to her, "Shut the door and go
down." She did what he bade her to do. After a while she went up to him
and saw his blessed soul had departed his body his frame. It was gone to the
Supreme Master, and it ascended with the desire to meet Him as he had an
appointment there with the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) and his two Companions Abu
Bakr and `Umar and the noble circle of martyrs!
Long had the burning desire stirred Salmaan. The time had come
for him to rest in peace.
Adapted from: Men Around The
Messenger
by
Khalid Muhammad Khalid
Wednesday, October 14, 2015
MUS'AB IBN `UMAIR (The First Envoy of Islam)
Verily
all praise is for Allah, we praise Him and seek His aid, and we ask for His
forgiveness, and we seek refuge in Allah from the evils of our own selves and
from our evil deeds. Whomsoever Allah has guided, none can misguide him, and
whomsoever Allah has misguided, none can guide him, and I testify that none has
the right to be worshiped except Allah, without any partner, and I testify
that Muhammad is His servant and Messenger.
While reading this, we cannot help but be
moved by the lives of the Companions herein depicted. How we long to have their
awe and reverence for Allah! How we long to spend the same hours in worship as
they! How we long to be as brave as they were in the face of danger! How we
long to be as patient as they were under torture! It is my hope that this will fulfill a need for the English speaking Muslim to
learn more about that first generation of Muslims. Indeed the Companions -
those men and women who were contemporaneous with the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH)
-- inspire and encourage us. Read these stories and share them with your
children, for these Companions are a part of our Islamic heritage that will,
Allah willing, strengthen us as a nation if we try to follow their
examples.
To proceed, MUS'AB IBN `UMAIR (The First Envoy of Islam)
This man among the Companions of the Prophet Muhammad
(PBUH), how good it is for us to start with him. He was the flower of the
Quraish, the most handsome and youthful! Historians and narrators describe him
as "The most charming of the Makkans".
He was born and brought up in wealth, and he grew up with
its luxuries. Perhaps there was no boy in Makkah who was pampered by his
parents like Mus`ab lbn `Umair. This mirthful youth, caressed and pampered, the
talk of the ladies of Makkah, the jewel of its clubs and assemblies: is it
possible for him to be one of the legends of faith?
By Allah, how interesting a tale, the story of Mus`ab Ibn
`Umair or Mus`ab the Good, as he was nicknamed among the Muslims! He was one of
those made by Islam and fostered by the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH).
But who was he? His story is a pride of all mankind. The
youth heard one day what the people of Makkah had begun to hear about Muhammad
the Truthful, that Allah had sent him as bearer of glad tidings and a warner to
call them to the worship of Allah the One God. When Makkah slept and awoke
there was no other talk but the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) and his religion, and
this spoiled boy was one of the most attentive listeners.
That was because, although he was young, the flower of clubs
and assemblies, the outward appearance of wisdom and common sense were among
the traits of Mus`ab.
He heard that the Prophet (PBUH) and those who believed in
him were meeting far away from the dignitaries and great men of the Quraish at
As-safaa in the house of Al-Arqam lbn Al-Arqam daar AlArqam. He wasted no time.
He went one night to the Daar Al Arqam, yearning and anxious. There, the
Prophet (PBUH) was meeting his Companions, reciting the Qur'aan to them and
praying with them to Allah the Most Exalted. Mus`ab had hardly taken his seat
and contemplated the verses of Qur'aan recited by the Prophet (PBUH) when his
heart became the promised heart that night.
The pleasure almost flung him from his seat as he was filled
with a wild ecstasy. But the Prophet (PBUH) patted his throbbing heart with his
blessed right hand, and the silence of the ocean's depth filled his heart. In
the twinkling of an eye, the youth who had just become Muslim appeared to have
more wisdom than his age and a determination that would change the course of
time!
Mus`ab's mother was Khunaas Bint Maalik, and people feared
her almost to the point of terror because she possessed a strong personality.
When Mus`ab became a Muslim, he was neither careful before nor afraid of anyone
on the face of the earth except his mother. Even if Makkah, with all its idols,
nobles, and deserts were to challenge him, he would stand up to it. As for a
dispute with his mother, this was an impossible horror, so he thought quickly
and decided to keep his Islam secret until Allah willed. He continued to
frequent Daar Al-Arqam and take lessons from the Prophet (PBUH). He was
satisfied with his faith and avoided the anger of his mother, who had no
knowledge of his embracing Islam.
However, Makkah at that time kept no secret, for the eyes
and ears of the Quraish were everywhere, very alert and checking every
footprint in its hot sands. Once, `Uthmaan Ibn Taihah saw him steadily entering
alarm's house, then he saw him a second time praying the prayer like Muhammad.
No sooner had he seen him than he ran quickly with the news to Mus`ab's mother,
who was astonished by it.
Mus`ab stood before his mother, the people, and the nobles
of Makkah who assembled around him, telling them the irrefutable truth and
reciting the Qur'aan with which the Prophet (PBUH) cleansed their hearts and
filled them with honor, wisdom, justice, and piety. His mother aimed a heavy
blow at him, but the hand which was meant as an arrow soon succumbed to the
powerful light which increased the radiance of his face with innocent glory
because it demanded respect with its quiet confidence. However, his mother,
under the pressure of her motherliness, spared him the beating and the pain,
although it was within her power to avenge her gods whom he had abandoned.
Instead she took him to a rough corner of her house and shut him in it. She put
shackles on him and imprisoned him there until he heard the news of the
emigration (hijab) of some of the believers to Abyssinia. He thought to himself
and was able to delude his mother and his guards, and so escaped to Abyssinia.
There he stayed in Abyssinia with his fellow emigrants and
then returned with them to Makkah. He also emigrated to Abyssinia for the
second time with the Companions whom the Prophet (PBUH) advised to emigrate and
they obeyed. But whether Mus`ab was in Abyssinia or Makkah, the experience of
his faith proclaimed itself in all places and at all times.
Musa became confident that his life had become good enough
to be offered as a sacrifice to the Supreme Originator and great Creator. He
went out one day to some Muslims while they were sitting around the Prophet
(PBUH) , and no sooner did they see him than they lowered their heads and shed
some tears because they saw him wearing worn out garments. They were accustomed
to his former appearance before he had become a Muslim, when his clothes had
been like garden flowers, elegant and fragrant.
The Prophet (PBUH) saw him with the eyes of wisdom, thankful
and loving, and his lips smiled gracefully as he said, "I saw Mus`ab here,
and there was no youth in Makkah more petted by his parents than he. Then he
abandoned all that for the love of Allah and His Prophet!"
His mother had withheld from him all the luxury he had been
overwhelmed by, when she could not return him to her religion. She refused to
let anyone who had abandoned their gods eat of her food, even if he was her
son. Her last connection with him was when she tried to imprison him for a
second time after his return from Abyssinia, and he swore that if she did that,
he would kill all those who came to her aid to lock him up. She knew the truth
of his determination when he was intent and decided to do something, and so she
bade him good bye weeping.
The parting moment revealed a strange adherence to
infidelity on the part of his mother, and the greater adherence to faith on the
part of her son. When she said to him, while turning him out of her house,
"Go away, I am no longer your mother," he went close to her and said,
"O mother, I am advising you and my heart is with you, please bear witness
that there is no god but Allah and that Muhammad is His servant and
messenger." She replied to him, angrily raging, "By the stars, I will
never enter your religion, to degrade my status and weaken my senses!"
So Mus`ab left the great luxury in which he had been living.
He became satisfied with a hard life he had never seen before, wearing the
roughest clothes, eating one day and going hungry another. This spirit, which
was grounded in the strongest faith, adorned with the light of Allah, made him
another man, one who appeals to the eyes of other great souls.
While he was in this state, the Prophet (PBUH) commissioned
him with the greatest mission of his life, which was to be his envoy to
Al-Madiinah. His mission was to instruct the Ansaar who believed in the Prophet
(PBUH) and had pledged their allegiance to him at `Aqabah, to call others to
Islam, and to prepare Al-Madiinah for the day of the great Hijrah. There were
among the Companions of the Prophet (PBUH) at that time others who were older
than Mus`ab and more prominent and nearer to the Prophet (PBUH) by family
relations. But the Prophet (PBUH) chose Mus`ab the Good, knowing that he was
entrusting to him the most important task of that time, putting into his hands
the destiny of Islam at AlMadiinah. The radiant city of Al-Madiinah was
destined to be the home of Hijrah, the springboard of Islamic preachers and the
liberators of the future. Mus`ab was equal to the task and trust which Allah
had given him and he was equipped with an excellent mind and noble character.
He won the hearts of the Madinites with his piety, uprightness and sincerity.
And so they embraced the religion of Allah in flocks.
At the time the Prophet (PBUH) sent him there, only twelve
Muslims had pledged allegiance to the Prophet (PBUH) at the Pledge of `Aqabah.
He had hardly completed a few months when they answered to the call of Allah
and the Prophet (PBUH). During the next pilgrimage season, the Madinite Muslims
sent a delegation of 70 believing men and women to Makkah to meet the Prophet
(PBUH).
They came with their teacher and their Prophet's envoy,
Mus`ab Ibn `Umair. Mus`ab had proven, by his good sense and excellence, that
the Prophet (PBUH) knew well how to choose his envoys and teachers.
Mus'ab had understood his mission well. He knew that he was
a caller to Allah and preacher of His religion, which calls people to right
guidance and the straight path. Like the Prophet (PBUH) in whom he believed, he
was no more than a deliverer of the message. There he stood fast, with As`ad
Ibn Zoraarah as host, and both of them used to visit the tribes, dwellings, and
assemblies, reciting to the people what he had of the Book of Allah, instilling
in them that Allah is no more than One God.
He had confronted certain instances which could have put an
end to his life and that of those with him but for his active, intelligent,
great mind. One day, he was taken by surprise while preaching to the people to
find Usaid lbn hudair, leader of the `Abd Al-Ashhal tribe, at Al-Madiinah
confronting him with a drawn arrow.
He was raging with anger and animosity against the one who
had come to corrupt the religion of his people by telling them to abandon their
gods and talking to them about the idea of only One God Whom they did not know
before and had never heard of. Their gods were to them the center of their
worship. Whenever any of them needed them, he knew their places. They would
invoke them for help. That was how they thought and imagined!
As for the God of Muhammad, to whom this envoy was calling,
nobody knew His place, nor could anybody see Him! When the Muslims who were
sitting around Mus`ab, saw Usaid lbn hudair advancing in his unbridled anger,
they were frightened, but Mus`ab the Good stood firm. Usaid stood before him
and As`ad lbn Zoraarah shouting, "What brought you here? Are you coming to
corrupt our faith? Go away if you wish to be saved!"
And like the calmness of the sea and its force, Mus`ab
started his fine speech saying, "Won't you sit down and listen? If you
like our cause, you can accept; and if you dislike it, we will spare you of
what you hate."
Allah is the Greatest! How grand an opening whose ending
would be pleasant! Usaid was a thoughtful and clever man, and here he saw
Mus`ab inviting him to listen and no more. If he was convinced he would accept
it, and if he was not convinced, then Mus`ab would leave his neighborhood and
his clan, and move to another neighborhood without harm, nor being harmed.
There and then Usaid answered him saying, "Well, that is fair," and
he dropped his arrow to the ground and sat down listening.
Mus`ab had hardly read the Qur'aan, explaining the mission
with which Muhammad lbn `Abd Allah (PBUH) came, when the conscience of Usaid
began to dear and brighten and change with the effectiveness of the words. He
became overwhelmed by its beauty. When Mus`ab finished speaking, Usaid lbn
Hudair exclaimed to him and those with him, "How beautiful is this speech,
and how true! How can one enter this religion?" Mus`ab told him to purify
his body and clothes and say, "I bear witness that there is no god but
Allah." Usaid retired for some time and then returned pouring clean water
on his head and standing there proclaiming, "I bear witness that there is
no god but Allah, and that Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah."
The news spread like lightning and then Sa`d Ibn Mu`aadh
came and listened to Mus`ab, and he was convinced and embraced Islam. Then came
Sa`d lbn `Ubaadah.
There and then blessings came with their entering Islam. The
people of Al-Madiinah came together asking one another, "If Usaid lbn
Hudair, Sa`d Ibn Mu`aadh and Sa`d Ibn `Ubaadah have embraced Islam, what are we
waiting for? Go straight to Mus`ab and believe. By Allah, he is calling us to
the truth and the straight path!"
The first envoy of the Prophet (PBUH) succeeded without
comparison. It was a success which he deserved and to which he was equal.
The days and years passed by. The Prophet (PBUH) and his
Companions emigrated to Al-Madiinah, and the Quraish were raging with envy and
their ungodly pursuit after the pious worshippers. So the Battle of Badr took
place, in which they were taught a lesson and lost their strong hold. After
that they prepared themselves for revenge, and thus came the Battle of Uhud.
The Muslims mobilized themselves, and the Prophet (PBUH) stood in their midst
to sort out among their faithful faces and to choose one to bear the standard.
He then called for Mus`ab the Good, and he advanced and carried the
standard.
The terrible battle was raging, the fighting furious. The
archers disregarded the orders of the Prophet (PBUH) by leaving their positions
on the mountain when they saw the polytheists withdrawing as if defeated. But
this act of theirs soon turned the victory of the Muslims to defeat. The
Muslims were taken at unawares by the cavalry of the Quraish at the mountain
top, and many Muslims were killed by the swords of the polytheists as a
consequence.
When they saw the confusion and horror splitting the ranks
of the Muslims, the polytheists concentrated on the Prophet of Allah to finish
him off. Mus`ab saw the impending threat, so he raised the standard high,
shouting, "allahu Akbar! Allah is the Greatest!" like the roar of a
lion. He turned and jumped left and right, fighting and killing the foe. All he
wanted was to draw the attention of the enemy to himself in order to turn their
attention away from the Prophet (PBUH). He thus became as a whole army in
himself. Nay, Mus`ab went alone to fight as if he were an army of giants
raising the standard in sanctity with one hand, striking with his sword with
the other. But the enemies were multiplying on him. They wanted to step on his
corpse so that they could find the Prophet (PBUH).
Let us allow a living witness to describe for us the last
scene of Mus`ab the Great. Ibn Sa`d said:
Ibraahiim lbn Muhammad lbn Sharhabiil Al-'Abdriy related
from his father, who said: Mus`ab lbn `Umair carried the standard on the Day of
Uhud. When the Muslims were scattered, he stood fast until he met lbn Qumaah
who was a knight. He struck him on his right hand and cut it off, but Mus`ab
said, "and Muhammad is but a Messenger. Messengers have passed away before
him " (3:144). He carried the standard with his left hand and leaned on
it. He struck his left hand and cut it off, and so he leaned on the standard
and held it with his upper arms to his chest, all the while saying, "And
Muhammad is but a Messenger. Messengers have passed away before him". Then
a third one struck him with his spear, and the spear went through him. Mus`ab
fell and then the standard.
Nay, the cream of martyrdom had fallen! He fell after he had
struggled for the sake of Allah in the great battle of sacrifice and faith. He
had thought that if he fell, he would be a stepping stone to the death of the
Prophet (PBUH) because he would be without defense and protection. But he put
himself in harm's way for the sake of the Prophet (PBUH) over-powered by his
fear for and love of him, he continued to say with every sword stroke that fell
on him from the foe, "and Muhammad is but a Messenger. Messengers have
passed away before him "(3:144). This verse was revealed later, after he
had spoken it. After the bitter
battle, they found the corpse of the upright martyr lying with his face in the
dust, as if he feared to look while harm fell on the Prophet (PBUH). So he hid
his face so that he would avoid the scene. Or perhaps, he was shy when he fell
as a martyr, before making sure of the safety of the Prophet of Allah, and
before serving to the very end, guarding and protecting him.
Allah is with you, O
Mus`ab! What a great life story!
The Prophet (PBUH)
and his Companions came to inspect the scene of the battle and bid farewell to
its martyrs. Pausing at Mus`ab's body, tears dripped from the Prophet's eyes.
Khabbaab lbn Al-Arat narrated: We emigrated with the Prophet (PBUH) for Allah's
cause, so our reward became due with Allah. Some of us passed away without
enjoying anything in this life of his reward, and one of them was Mus`ab
Ibn`Umair, who was martyred on the Day of Uhud. He did not leave behind
anything except a sheet of shredded woolen cloth. If we covered his head with
it, his feet were uncovered, and if we covered his feet with it, his head was
uncovered. The Prophet (PBUH) said to us, "Cover his head with it and put
lemon grass over his feet."
Despite the deep, sad pain which the Prophet (PBUH) suffered
over the loss of his uncle Hamzah and the mutilation of his corpse by the polytheists
in a manner that drew tears from the Prophet (PBUH) and broke his heart;
despite the fact that the field of battle was littered with the corpses of his
Companions, all of whom represented the peak of truth, piety and enlightenment;
despite all this, he stood at the corpse of his first envoy, bidding him
farewell and weeping bitterly. Nay, the Prophet (PBUH) stood at the remains of
Mus`ab lbn `Umair saying, while his eyes were flowing with tears, love and
loyalty, "Among the believers are men who have been true to their covenant
with Allah " (33:23).
Then he gave a sad look at the garment in which he was
shrouded and said, "I saw you at Makkah, and there was not a more precious
jewel, nor more distinguished one than you, and here you are bareheaded in a
garment!" Then the Prophet (PBUH) looked at all the martyrs in the
battlefield and said, "The Prophet of Allah witnesses that you are martyrs
to Allah on the Day of Resurrection." Then he gathered his living
Companions around him and said, "O people, visit them, come to them, and
salute them. By Allah, no Muslim will salute them but that they will salute him
in return."
Peace be on you, O Mus`ab. Peace be on you, O Martyrs. Peace
and blessings of Allah be upon you!
Adapted from: Men Around The Messenger
by
Khalid Muhammad Khalid
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)