|
Stories Of The Companions ::
قصص الصحابة رضوان الله عليهم
--
'Abbaad Ibn Bishr |
‘Abdullah Ibn ‘Abbaas |
‘Abdullah Ibn 'Amr Ibn Al-'Aas |
'Abdullah ibn Hudhafah as-Sahmi |
'Abdullah ibn Jahsh |
'Abdullah Ibn Mas'uud |
'Abdullah Ibn Rawaahah |
'Abdullah Ibn Sailam |
'Abdallah Ibn 'Umar |
'Abdullah ibn Umm Maktum |
'Abdullah Ibn Az-Zubair |
'Abd Ar- Rahman Ibn Abi Bakr |
'Abd Ar-Rahman Ibn 'Awf |
Abu Ad-Dardaa |
Abu Ayuub Al-Ansaariy |
Abu Dhar Al-Ghifaariy |
Abu Jabir Abdallah bin
Amr bin Hiram |
Abu Hurairah |
Abu-l Aas ibn ar-Rabiah |
Abu Muusaa Al-Ash'ariy |
Abu Sufyaan Ibn Al-Haarith |
Abu Ubaydah ibn al-Jarrah |
'Adiyy ibn Hatim |
'Aishah bint Abi Bakr |
Al-'Abbaas Ibn 'Abd Al-Muttalib |
Al-Baraa' Ibn Maalik |
Al-Miqdaad Ibn 'Amr |
'Ammaar Ibn Yaasir |
'Amr Ibn Al -'Aas |
'Amr Ibn Al-Jamuuh |
An-Nuayman ibn Amr |
An-Numan ibn Muqarrin |
Asmaa bint Abu Bakr |
At-Tufail Ibn 'Amr Ad-Dawsiy |
Az-Zubair Ibn Al-'Awaam |
Barakah |
Bilaal Ibn Rabaah |
Fatimah bint Muhammad |
Fayruz ad-Daylami |
Hakim ibn Hazm |
Hamzah Ibn 'Abd Al-Muttalib |
Hudhaifah Ibn Al-Yamaan |
Ikrimah ibn Abi Jahl |
Ja'far Ibn Abi Taalib |
Julaybib |
Habib Ibn Zaid |
Khabbab ibn al-Arat |
Khaalid Ibn Al-Waliid |
Khaalid Ibn Sa'iid |
Khubaib Ibn 'Adiy |
Mi'aadh Ibn Jabal |
Muhammad ibn Maslamah |
Mus'ab Ibn 'Umair |
Nuaym ibn Masud |
Rabiah ibn Kab |
Ramlah bint Abi Sufyan |
Rumaysa bint Milhan |
Qais Ibn Sad Ibn Ubaadah |
Sa'd Ibn Abi Waqqaas |
Sa'd Ibn Mitaadh |
Sa'd Ibn 'Ubaadah |
Sa'iid Ibn Aamir |
Sa'iid ibn Zayd |
Saalim Mawlaa Abi Hudhaifah |
Salamah Ibn Al-Akwa' |
Salmaan Al-Faarisiy |
Suhayb ar-Rumi |
Suhayb Ibn Sinaan |
Suhayl Ibn'Amr |
Talhah Ibn - Ubaid Allah |
Thaabit Ibn Qais |
Thumamah ibn Uthal |
'Ubaadah Ibn As-Saamit |
Ubaiy Ibn Ka'b |
Umair Ibn Sa'd |
Umair Ibn Wahb |
'Umraan Ibn Husain |
Umm Salamah |
Uqbah ibn Aamir |
Usaamah Ibn Zaid |
Usaid Ibn Hudair |
'Utbah Ibn Ghazwaan |
'Uthmaan Ibn Madh'uun |
Zayd al-Khayr |
Zayd Ibn Al-Khattaab |
Zayd Ibn Haarithah |
Zayd Ibn Thaabit
Uqbah ibn Aamir
After a long and
exhausting journey, the Prophet, peace
be on him, is at last on the outskirts
of Yathrib. The good people of the city
go out to meet him. Many crowd the
narrow streets. Some stand on roof-tops
chanting La ilaha ilia Allah and Allahu
Akbar in sheer joy at meeting the
Prophet of Mercy and his loyal
companion, Abu Bakr as-Siddiq. The small
girls of the city come out gaily beating
their daffs and singing the words of
welcome:
Tala 'a-l badru
alaynaa
Min Thaniyaati-l Wadaa'
Wajaba-sh shukru alaynaa
Maa da'aa lillaahi daa'
Ayyuha-l mab 'uthu finaa
Ji'ta bi-l amri-l
mutaa' Ji'ta sharrafta-l Madinah
Marhaban yaa khayra-d
daa'.
"The full moon
has come upon us. From beyond the hills
of Thaniyaati-l Wadaa Grateful we must
be. For what to God he calls? O you who
has been sent among us? You came with a
mission to be obeyed. You came, you
honoured the city; Welcome, O best of
those who call (to God).
As the procession of
the blessed Prophet wended its way, all
around there were joyful hearts, tears
of ecstasy, smiles of sheer happiness.
Far away from these
scenes of jubilation and delight was a
young man named Uqbah ibn Aamir al-Juhani.
He had gone out to the bawadi, the open
expanses of desert, to graze his flocks
of sheep and goats on the sparse
vegetation. He had wandered far in
search of fodder for his hungry flock.
It was difficult to find suitable
grazing grounds and he was constantly
afraid that his flock would perish. They
were all he possessed and he did not
want to lose them.
The happiness which
engulfed Yathrib, henceforth to be known
as the radiant city of the Prophet, soon
spread to the near and distant bawadi
and reached every nook and corner of the
land. The good news of the Prophet's
arrival finally reached Uqbah as he
tended his flocks far away in the
inhospitable desert. His response to the
news was immediate as he himself
relates: "The Prophet, may God
bless him and grant him peace, came to
Madinah while I was tending my sheep.
When I heard the news of his coming, I
set out to meet him without delay. When
I met him I asked:
'Will you accept my
pledge of allegiance, O Messenger of
God?' 'And who are you?' asked the
Prophet. 'Uqbah ibn Aamir al-Juhani ,' I
replied. 'Which do you prefer,' he
asked, 'the pledge of a nomad or the
pledge of someone who has migrated?'
'The pledge of someone who has
migrated,' I said. So the Messenger of
God took the same pledge from me as he
did from the Muhajirin. I spent the
night with him and then went back to my
flock.
There were twelve of
us who had accepted Islam but we lived
far from the city tending our sheep and
goats in the open country. We came to
the conclusion that it would be good for
us if we went to the Prophet daily, so
that he could instruct us in our
religion and recite for us whatever
revelation he had received from on high.
I told the others:
'Take turns to go to
the Messenger of God, peace be on him.
Anyone going may leave his sheep with me
because I am too worried and concerned
about my own flock to leave them in the
care of someone else.'
Each day, one after
another of my friends went to the
Prophet, leaving his sheep for me to
look after. When each returned, I learnt
from him what he had heard and
benefitted from what he had understood.
Before long, however, I returned to my
senses and said to myself:
'Woe to you! Is it
because of a flock of sheep that you
remain thin and wretched and lose the
opportunity to be in the company of the
Prophet and to speak directly to him
without an intermediary':' With this, I
left my flock, went to Madinah and
stayed in the masjid close to the
Messenger of God, may God bless him and
grant him peace."
Uqbah had no reason to
regret having taken this fateful
decision. Within a decade, he had become
one of the outstanding scholars among
the companions of the Prophet, a
competent and beautiful reciter of the
Quran, a military commander and later on
one of the eminent Muslim governors as
Islam spread east and west with
astonishing rapidity. He could never
have imagined as he left his flock to
follow the teachings of the noble
Prophet, that he would have been among
the vanguard of the Muslim forces that
liberated fertile Damascus - then known
as the "mother of the
universe" and that he would have a
house for himself among its verdant
gardens. He could never have imagined
that he would be one of the commanders
who liberated Egypt, then known as the
"emerald of the world", and
that he would be one of its governors.
The fateful decision
however was taken. Alone, without
possessions or relatives, Uqbah came to
Madinah from the hawadi. He stayed with
others like him on the Suffah or
elevated part of the Prophet's mosque,
near his house. The Suffah was like a
reception point where people like Uqbah
would go because they wanted to be close
to the Prophet. They were known as the
"Ashab as-Suffah" and the
Prophet once described them as the
"guests of Islam".
Because they had no
income, the Prophet always shared his
food with them and encouraged others to
be generous to these "guests".
They spent much of their time studying
the Quran and learning about Islam. What
a marvellous opportunity they had! They
were in close and regular contact with
the Prophet. He had a special love and
concern for them and took care to
educate them and look after them in all
respects. Uqbah gave an example of how
the Prophet trained and taught them. He
said:
"One day, the
Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant
him peace, came out to us while we were
on the Suffah and asked:
'Which of you would
like to go out to the open country or a
valley every day and fetch for himself
two beautiful, black camels?' (Such
camels were considered prize
possessions. )
'Everyone of us would
like that, O Messenger of God,' we all
replied.
'Now,' he said, 'each
one of you should go to the mosque and
learn two ayats (verses) of the Book of
God. This is better for him than two
camels; three verses are better than
three camels; four verses are better
than four camels (and son)."
In this way, the
Prophet tried to bring about a change in
attitudes among those who had accepted
Islam, a change from obsession with
acquiring worldly possessions to an
attitude of devotion to knowledge. His
simple example provided them with
motivation and a powerful incentive to
acquire knowledge.
On other occasions,
the Ashab as-Suffah would ask questions
of the Prophet in order to understand
their religion better. Once, Uqbah said,
he asked the Prophet, "What is
salvation?" and he replied:
"Control your tongue, make your
house spacious for guests and spurn your
mistakes."
Even outside the
mosque, Uqbah tried to stay close to the
Prophet. On journeys, he often took the
reins of the Prophet's mule and went
wherever the Prophet desired. Sometimes
he followed directly behind the Prophet,
peace be on him, and so came to be
called the redif of the Prophet. On some
occasions, the Prophet would descend
from his mount and allow Uqbah to ride
while he himself walked. Uqbah described
one such occasion:
"I took hold of
the reins of the Prophet's mule while
passing through some palm groves of
Madinah.
'Uqbah ,' the Prophet
said to me, 'don't you want to ride.'?'
I thought of saying
'no' but I felt there might be an
element of disobedience to the Prophet
in such a reply so I said: 'Yes, O
Prophet of God.'
The Prophet then got
down from his mule and I mounted in
obedience to his command. He began to
walk. Shortly afterwards I dismounted.
The Prophet mounted again and said to
me:
'Uqbah, shall I not
teach you two surahs the like of which
has not been heard before.'?'
'Certainly, O
Messenger of God,' I replied. And so he
recited to me "Qul a'udhu bi
rabbi-l Falaq" and "Qul a'udhu
bi rabbi-n nas" (the last two
surahs of the Quran). I then said the
Iqamah for Salat. The Prophet led the
Salat and recited these two surahs.
(Afterwards), he said: 'Read both these
surahs when you go to sleep and whenever
you wake up.'"
The above instances
show "continuous education" at
its best, at home, in the mosque,
riding, walking in the open school of
the Prophet, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace.
Two objectives
occupied Uqbah's attention throughout
his life; the search for knowledge and
jihad in the path of God. He applied his
energies totally to these objectives.
In the field of
learning, he drank deeply from the
fountain of knowledge that was the
Messenger of God, peace be on him. Uqbah
became a distinguished muqri (reciter of
the Quran), a muhaddith (recorder and
narrator of the sayings of the Prophet);
a faqih (jurist); a faradi (expert on
the Islamic laws of inheritance); an
adib (literateur); a fasih (orator) and
a sha'ir (poet).
In reciting the Quran,
he had a most pleasant and beautiful
voice. In the stillness of the night,
when the entire universe seems peaceful
and tranquil, he would turn to the Book
of God, and recite its overpowering
verses. The hearts of the noble
companions would be drawn to his
recitation. Their whole being would be
shaken and they would be moved to tears
from the fear of God which his
recitation induced.
One day Umar ibn al-Khattab
invited him and said:
"Recite for me
something from the Book of God, O Uqbah."
"At your command, O Amir al-Muminin,"
said Uqbah and began reciting. Umar wept
till his beard was wet.
Uqbah left a copy of
the Quran written in his own hand. It is
said that this copy of the Quran existed
until quite recently in Egypt in the
well-known mosque named after Uqbah ibn
Aamir himself. At the end of this text
was written: "Uqbah ibn Aamir al-Juhani
wrote it." This Mushaf of Uqbah was
one of the earliest copies of the Quran
in existence but it was lost in its
entirety with other priceless documents
due to the carelessness of Muslims.
In the field of Jihad,
it is sufficient to know that Uqbah
fought beside the Prophet, peace be on
him, at the Battle of Uhud and in all
the military engagements thereafter. He
was also one of the valiant and daring
group of shock troopers who were tested
to their maximum during the battle for
Damascus. In recognition for his
outstanding services, the commander of
the Muslim forces then, Abu Ubaydah ibn
al-Jarrah, despatched Uqbah to Madinah
to convey the good news of the
liberation of Damascus to Umar ibn al-Khattab.
Uqbah spent eight days and seven nights,
from Friday to Friday, in a continuous
forced march to bring the news to Umar.
Uqbah was one of the
commanders of the Muslim forces that
liberated Egypt. For three years he was
the Muslim governor of Egypt after which
he received orders from the Caliph
Muawiyah to mount a naval expedition to
the island of Rhodes in the
Mediterranean Sea.
An indication of
Uqbah's enthusiasm for jihad is the fact
that he committed to memory the sayings
of the Prophet on this subject and
became a specialist in narrating them to
the Muslims. One of his favorite
pastimes was to practice the skill of
spear throwing.
Uqbah was in Egypt
when he became fatally ill. He gathered
his children together and gave them his
final advise. He said: "My
children, guard against three things:
Don't accept; my saying attributed to
the Prophet, peace be on him, except
from a reliable authority. Do not incur
debts or take up a loan even if you are
in the position of an imam. Don't
compose poetry for your hearts might be
distracted thereby from the Quran."
Uqbah ibn Aamir al-Juhani,
the qari, the alim, the ghazi, died in
Cairo and was buried at the foot of the
Muqattam hills.
©
EsinIslam.Com
Links To Sahabah The Companions Of Prophet Muhammad
(SAW):
Stories Of The Companions ::
قصص الصحابة رضوان الله عليهم
--
'Abbaad Ibn Bishr |
‘Abdullah Ibn ‘Abbaas |
‘Abdullah Ibn 'Amr Ibn Al-'Aas |
'Abdullah ibn Hudhafah as-Sahmi |
'Abdullah ibn Jahsh |
'Abdullah Ibn Mas'uud |
'Abdullah Ibn Rawaahah |
'Abdullah Ibn Sailam |
'Abdallah Ibn 'Umar |
'Abdullah ibn Umm Maktum |
'Abdullah Ibn Az-Zubair |
'Abd Ar- Rahman Ibn Abi Bakr |
'Abd Ar-Rahman Ibn 'Awf |
Abu Ad-Dardaa |
Abu Ayuub Al-Ansaariy |
Abu Dhar Al-Ghifaariy |
Abu Jabir Abdallah bin
Amr bin Hiram |
Abu Hurairah |
Abu-l Aas ibn ar-Rabiah |
Abu Muusaa Al-Ash'ariy |
Abu Sufyaan Ibn Al-Haarith |
Abu Ubaydah ibn al-Jarrah |
'Adiyy ibn Hatim |
'Aishah bint Abi Bakr |
Al-'Abbaas Ibn 'Abd Al-Muttalib |
Al-Baraa' Ibn Maalik |
Al-Miqdaad Ibn 'Amr |
'Ammaar Ibn Yaasir |
'Amr Ibn Al -'Aas |
'Amr Ibn Al-Jamuuh |
An-Nuayman ibn Amr |
An-Numan ibn Muqarrin |
Asmaa bint Abu Bakr |
At-Tufail Ibn 'Amr Ad-Dawsiy |
Az-Zubair Ibn Al-'Awaam |
Barakah |
Bilaal Ibn Rabaah |
Fatimah bint Muhammad |
Fayruz ad-Daylami |
Hakim ibn Hazm |
Hamzah Ibn 'Abd Al-Muttalib |
Hudhaifah Ibn Al-Yamaan |
Ikrimah ibn Abi Jahl |
Ja'far Ibn Abi Taalib |
Julaybib |
Habib Ibn Zaid |
Khabbab ibn al-Arat |
Khaalid Ibn Al-Waliid |
Khaalid Ibn Sa'iid |
Khubaib Ibn 'Adiy |
Mi'aadh Ibn Jabal |
Muhammad ibn Maslamah |
Mus'ab Ibn 'Umair |
Nuaym ibn Masud |
Rabiah ibn Kab |
Ramlah bint Abi Sufyan |
Rumaysa bint Milhan |
Qais Ibn Sad Ibn Ubaadah |
Sa'd Ibn Abi Waqqaas |
Sa'd Ibn Mitaadh |
Sa'd Ibn 'Ubaadah |
Sa'iid Ibn Aamir |
Sa'iid ibn Zayd |
Saalim Mawlaa Abi Hudhaifah |
Salamah Ibn Al-Akwa' |
Salmaan Al-Faarisiy |
Suhayb ar-Rumi |
Suhayb Ibn Sinaan |
Suhayl Ibn'Amr |
Talhah Ibn - Ubaid Allah |
Thaabit Ibn Qais |
Thumamah ibn Uthal |
'Ubaadah Ibn As-Saamit |
Ubaiy Ibn Ka'b |
Umair Ibn Sa'd |
Umair Ibn Wahb |
'Umraan Ibn Husain |
Umm Salamah |
Uqbah ibn Aamir |
Usaamah Ibn Zaid |
Usaid Ibn Hudair |
'Utbah Ibn Ghazwaan |
'Uthmaan Ibn Madh'uun |
Zayd al-Khayr |
Zayd Ibn Al-Khattaab |
Zayd Ibn Haarithah |
Zayd Ibn Thaabit |
Muhammad The Messenger Of Allah ::
محمّد رسول الله صلى الله عليه
وسلّم --
Biography by a Muslim, Muhammad Hamidullah |
Biography by a non-Muslim, K. Rao |
The Prophet (s.a.w.) as a blessing to mankind |
Description Of The Prophet (s.a.w.) |
Finality of Prophethood |
Last Sermon Of The Prophets (s.a.w.) |
What other scholars say about the Prophet (s.a.w.) and
additional sayings |
The Rightly Guided Caliphs ::
الخلفاء الراشدون رضوان عليهم |
The First Caliph, Abu Bakr (632-634 A.C.)
|
The Second Caliph, Umar (634-644 A.C.) |
The Third Caliph, Uthman (644-656 A.C.) |
The Fourth Caliph, Ali (656-661 A.C.)
|
Muslim Profiles --
Imam Abu Hanifa |
Imam Ibn Hanbal |
Imam Malik |
Imam Al Shafi’i |
Al Ayoubi |
Al Battani |
Al Biruni |
Al Buzjani |
Al Farghani |
Al Kindi |
Al Idrisi |
Al Khayyam |
Al Khawarizmi |
Al Tusi |
Al Zahrawi |
Dan Fodio |
Ibn Al-Baitar |
Ibn Al Nafis |
Ibn Batuta |
Ibn Haiyan |
Ibn Khaldun |
Ibn Rushd |
Ibn Qurra |
Ibn Sina |
Ibn Ziyad |
Ibn Zuhr |
Sheikh Abdulfattah Abu-Abdullah Adelabu (Ph. D. Damas)
|