One of the most prominent
distinguishing features of the Muslim
woman is her deep faith in Allah (SWT),
and her sincere conviction that whatever
happens in this universe, and whatever
fate befalls human beings, only happens
through the will and decree of Allah (SWT);
whatever befalls a person could not have
been avoided, and whatever does not
happen to a person could not have been
made to happen. A person has no choice
in this life but to strive towards the
right path and to do good deeds - acts
of worship and other acts - by whatever
means one can, putting all his trust in
Allah (SWT), submitting to His will, and
believing that he is always in need of
Allah's (SWT) help and support.
The story of Hajar offers the Muslim
woman the most marvellous example of
deep faith in Allah (SWT) and sincere
trust in Him. Ibrahim `May peace be upon
him' (PBUH) left her at the Ka`bah in
Makkah, above the well of Zamzam, at a
time when there were no people and no
water in the place. Hajar had no-one
with her except her infant son Isma`il.
She asked Ibrahim, calmly and with no
trace of panic: "Has Allah (SWT)
commanded you to do this, O Ibrahim?"
Ibrahim (PBUH) said, "Yes."
Her response reflected her acceptance
and optimism: "Then He is not going
to abandon us." Reported by Bukhari
in Kitab al-Anbiya1
Here was an extremely difficult
situation: a man left his wife and
infant son in a barren land, where there
were no plants, no water, and no people,
and went back to the distant land of
Palestine. He left nothing with her but
a sack of dates and a skin filled with
water. Were it not for the deep faith
and trust in Allah (SWT) that filled
Hajar's heart, she would not have been
able to cope with such a difficult
situation; she would have collapsed
straight away, and would not have become
the woman whose name is forever
remembered night and day by those who
perform hajj and `umrah at the
house of Allah (SWT), every time they
drink the pure water of Zamzam, and run
between the mounts of Safa' and Marwah,
as Hajar did on that most trying day.
This deep faith and awareness had an
amazing effect on the lives of Muslim
men and women: it awoke their
consciences and reminded them that Allah
(SWT) witnesses and knows every secret,
and that He is with a person wherever he
may be. Nothing gives a clearer idea of
that consciousness and fear of Allah (SWT)
at all times than the story of the young
Muslim girl related in Sifat al-Safwah
and Wafiyat al-A'yan and cited by
Ibn al-Jawzi in Ahkam al-Nisa'
(pp. 441, 442):
"Narrated `Abdullah ibn Zayd ibn
Aslam, from his father, from his
grandfather, who said: `When I was
accompanying `Umar ibn al-Khattab on his
patrol of Madinah at night, he felt
tired, so he leant against a wall. It
was the middle of the night, and (we
heard) a woman say to her daughter,
"O my daughter, get up and mix that
milk with some water." The girl
said, "O Mother, did you not hear
the decree of Amir al-Mu'minin
(chief of the believers) today?"
The mother said, "What was
that?" The girl said, "He
ordered someone to announce in a loud
voice that milk should not be mixed with
water." The mother said, "Get
up and mix the milk with water; you are
in a place where `Umar cannot see
you." The girl told her mother,
"I cannot obey Him (Allah) in
public and disobey him in private."
`Umar heard this, and told me: "O
Aslam, go to that place and see who that
girl is, and to whom she was speaking,
and whether she has a husband." So
I went to that place, and I saw that she
was unmarried, the other woman was her
mother, and neither of them had a
husband. I came to `Umar and told him
what I had found out. He called his sons
together, and said to them: "Do any
of you need a wife, so I can arrange the
marriage for you? If I had the desire to
get married, I would have been the first
one to marry this young woman."
`Abdullah said: "I have a
wife." `Abd al-Rahman said: "I
have a wife." `Asim said: "I
do not have a wife, so let me marry
her." So `Umar arranged for her to
be married to `Asim. She gave him a
daughter, who grew up to be the mother
of `Umar ibn `Abd al-`Aziz.'"
This is the deep sense of awareness
that Islam had implanted in the heart of
this young woman. She was righteous and
upright in all her deeds, both in public
and in private, because she believed
that Allah (SWT) was with her at all
times and saw and heard everything. This
is true faith, and these are the effects
of that faith, which raised her to the
level of ihsan. One of the
immediate rewards with which Allah (SWT)
honoured her was this blessed marriage,
one of whose descendants was the fifth
rightly-guided khalifah, `Umar
ibn `Abd al-`Aziz `May Allah be pleased
with him' (RAA).
The Aqeedah (faith) of the
true Muslim woman is pure and clear,
uncontaminated by any stain of
ignorance, illusion or superstition.
This Aqeeda is based on faith in
Allah, (SWT) the One, the Most High, the
Eternal, Who is able to do all things,
Who is in control of the entire
universe, and to Whom all things must
return:
( Say: `Who is it in Whose hands is
the governance of all things - Who
protects [all], but is not protected
[by any]? [Say] if you know.' They
will say, `[It belongs] to Allah,'
Say: `Then how are you deluded?') (Qur'an
23:88-89)
This is the pure, deep faith which
increases the character of the Muslim
woman in strength, understanding and
maturity, so that she sees life as it
really is, which is a place of testing
whose results will be seen on the Day
which will undoubtedly come:
( Say: `It is Allah Who gives you
life, then gives you death; then He
will gather you together for the Day
of Judgement about which there is no
doubt': but most men do not understand.)
(Qur'an 45:26)
( Did you then think that We had
created you in jest, and that you
would not be brought back to Us [for
account]?) (Qur'an 23:115)
( Blessed is He in Whose hands
is Dominion; and He over all things
has Power - He Who created Death and
Life, that He may try which of you is
best in deed; and He is the Exalted in
Might, Oft-Forgiving.) (Qur'an
67:1-2)
On that Day, man will be brought to
account for his deeds. If they are good,
it will be good for him, and if they are
bad, it will be bad for him. There will
not be the slightest injustice:
( That Day will every soul be
requited for what it earned; no
injustice will there be that Day, for
Allah is Swift in taking account.) (Qur'an
40:17)
The Balance (in which man's deeds will
be weighed) will measure everything with
the utmost precision, either in a
person's favour or against him:
( Then shall anyone who has done an
atom's weight of good, see it! And
anyone who has done an atom's weight
of evil, shall see it.) (Qur'an
99:7-8)
Nothing could be hidden from the Lord of
Glory on that Day, not even if it were
as insignificant as a grain of mustard
seed:
( We shall set up scales of justice
for the day of Judgement, so that not
a soul will be dealt with unjustly in
the least. And if there be [no more
than] the weight of a mustard seed, We
will bring it [to account]: and enough
are We to take account.) (Qur'an
21:47)
No doubt the true Muslim woman, when she
ponders the meaning of these ayat,
would think about that crucial Day and
would turn to her Lord in obedience,
repentance and gratitude, seeking to do
as many righteous deeds as she is able,
in preparation for the Hereafter.
She Worships Allah(SWT)
It is no surprise that the true
Muslim woman enthusiastically worships
her Lord, because she knows that she is
obliged to observe all the commandments
that Allah (SWT) has enjoined upon every
Muslim, male or female. So she carries
out her Islamic duties properly, without
making excuses or compromises, or being
negligent.
She Regularly Prays Five Times a
Day
She offers each of the five daily
prayers at its appointed time, and does
not let domestic chores or her duties as
a wife and mother prevent her from doing
so. Prayer is the pillar of the -
whoever establishes prayer establishes
faith, and whoever neglects prayer
destroys the faith.2 Prayer
is the best and most noble of deeds, as
the Prophet `Peace and Blessing be upon
him' (PBUH) explained in the hadith
narrated by `Abdullah ibn Mas`ud (RAA):
"I asked the Messenger of Allah (PBUH):
`What deed is most beloved by Allah?'
(SWT) He said, `To offer each prayer
as soon as it is due.' I asked him,
`Then what?' He said, `Treating one's
parents with mercy and respect.' I
asked him, `Then what?' He said, `Jihad
(fighting) for the sake of Allah (SWT).'"3
Prayer is the link between the servant
and his (Rabb). It is the rich source
from which a person derives strength,
steadfastness, mercy and contentment,
and it is a means of cleansing the stain
of his or her sins:
Abu Hurayrah (RAA) narrated:
"I heard the Messenger of
Allah (PBUH) say: `What would you
think if there were a river running by
the door of any of you, and he bathed
in it five times every day, would any
trace of dirt be left on him?' The
people said: `There would be no trace
of dirt on him.' He said: `This is
like the five daily prayers, through
which Allah (SWT) erases sins.'"4
(Sharh al-Sunnah 2/175).
Jabir (RAA) said:
"The Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
said: `The five daily prayers are like
a deep river flowing by the door of
any of you, in which he bathes five
times every day.'"5
Prayer is a mercy, which Allah (SWT) has
bestowed upon His slaves; they seek its
shade five times a day and praise their
Rabb (Lord), glorifying Him, asking for
His help and seeking His mercy, guidance
and forgiveness. Thus prayer becomes a
means of purification for those who
pray, men and women alike, cleansing
them from their sins.
`Uthman ibn `Affan (RAA) said:
"I heard the Messenger of
Allah (PBUH) say: `There is no Muslim
person who, when the time for prayer
comes, performs wudu' properly,
concentrates on his prayer and bows
correctly, but the prayer will be an
expiation for the sins committed prior
to it, so long as no major sin has
been committed. This is the case until
the end of time.'"6 (Sahih
Muslim 3/112).
There are very many Hadith which speak
of the importance of salah and
the blessings it brings to the men and
women who pray, and the rich harvest of
benefits that they may reap thereby,
every time they stand before Allah (SWT)
in an attitude of humility and
repentance.
She May Attend the Jama`ah
(Congregational)
Prayer in the Mosque
Islam has excused women from the
obligation to attend the jama`ah
prayer in the mosque, but at the same
time, they are permitted to go out of
the house to attend jama`ah on
condition that they dress up well enough
not to cause any temptation. Indeed, the
first Muslim women did go out and pray
in the mosque behind the Prophet (PBUH).
`A'ishah (May Allah be pleased with
her) said:
"The Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
used to pray fajr, and the
believing women would pray with him,
wrapped up in their outer garments;
then they would go back to their
homes, and nobody would recognize
them."7
And:
"The believing women used to
attend fajr prayer with the
Messenger of Allah (PBUH), wrapped up
in their outer garments. Then they
would go back to their homes after
they had finished praying, and no one
would recognize them because of the
darkness."8
The Prophet (PBUH) used to shorten his
prayer if he heard a child crying,
because he understood the concern the
child's mother would be feeling. In a hadith
whose authenticity is agreed upon he (PBUH)
said:
"I begin the prayer, intending to
make it lengthy, but then I hear a
child crying, so I shorten my prayer
because I know the stress facing the
mother because of his crying."9
Allah (SWT) showed great mercy to women
by sparing them the obligation to offer
the five compulsory prayers in
congregation in the mosque. If He had
made this obligatory, it would have
placed an intolerable burden on women,
and they would not have been able to
fulfil it, just as we see many men
failing to pray regularly in the mosque
and finding themselves with no other
choice but to pray wherever they are, in
the workplace or in the home. The
woman's heavy burden of household chores
and attending to the needs of her
husband and children do not permit her
to leave the house five times a day; it
would be impossible for her to do so.
Thus the wisdom behind the limiting of
compulsory attendance at the mosque to
men only becomes quite clear. Her prayer
at home is described as being better for
her than her prayer in the mosque, but
Allah (SWT) gives her the freedom of
choice: she may pray at home if she
wishes, or she may go out to pray in the
mosque. If she asks her husband for
permission to go out to the mosque, he
is not allowed to stop her, as the
Prophet (PBUH) stated in a number of
hadith, for example:
"Do not stop your women from
going to the mosque, although their
houses are better for them."10
"If the wife of any of you
asks for permission to go to the
mosque, do not stop her."11
The men heeded the command of the
Prophet (PBUH), and allowed their women
to go to the mosque even if this was
against their own wishes. There is no
clearer indication of this than the
hadith of `Abdullah ibn `Umar, in which
he said:
"One of `Umar's wives used to
pray fajr and `isha' in
congregation in the mosque. She was
asked, `Why do you go out (to the
mosque) when you know that `Umar
dislikes this and is a jealous man?'
She said, `What is stopping him from
forbidding me (to do so)?' He said,
`The words of the Messenger of Allah (PBUH):
"Do not prevent the female
servants of Allah (SWT) from attending
the mosques of Allah (SWT)."'"12
In accordance with the Prophet's
teaching which allowed women to attend
the mosque, and forbade men to stop them
from doing so, the mosques were full of
women coming and going, both at the time
of the Prophet (PBUH), and whenever it
was possible in the following periods.
Women would come to pray, attend
lectures and classes, and take part in
the public life of Islam. This was the
case from the time congregational prayer
was prescribed for the Muslims. The
Muslims used to pray in the direction of
Bayt al-Maqdis (Jerusalem),
before the qiblah was changed to
the Holy Ka`bah. When the command of
Allah (SWT) to take the Ka`bah as their qiblah
was revealed, the men and women who were
praying were facing towards Palestine,
so they turned to face the direction of
the Ka`bah, which meant that the men and
women had to change places.13
The mosque was, and still is, the
centre of light and guidance for Muslim
men and women; in its pure environment
acts of worship are performed and from
its minbar messages of truth and
guidance are transmitted. From the dawn
of Islam, the Muslim woman has had her
role to play in the mosque.
There are many sahih reports,
which confirm the woman's presence and
role in the mosque. They describe how
women attended salat al-jumu`ah,
the eclipse prayer, and the Eid prayers,
responding to the call of the muezzin to
join the prayer.
A report in Sahih Muslim tells
us that Umm Hisham bint Harithah ibn al-Nu`man
said:
"I never learned `Qaf.
Wa'l-Qur'an al-majid . . .',
except from the Prophet (PBUH)
himself. He used to recite it from the
minbar every Friday, when he
addressed the people."14
Imam Muslim also narrates that the
sister of `Amrah bint `Abd al-Rahman
said:
"I learned `Qaf. Wa'l-Qur'an
al-majid . . .' from the Prophet (PBUH)
himself on Fridays, when he used to
recite it from the minbar every
Friday."15
The Prophet (PBUH) taught the Muslims to
prepare themselves and present a neat
and clean appearance at jumu`ah
prayers by encouraging both men and
women to take a shower (ghusl):
"Whoever comes to jumu`ah,
man or woman, should take a shower
first."16
Hadith reports also tell us that Asma'
bint Abi Bakr (May Allah be pleased with
her) attended the eclipse prayer (salat
al-kusuf) with the Prophet (PBUH).
She could not hear the Prophet's words
clearly, so she asked a man who was
nearby what he was saying. This hadith
is reported by Bukhari from As' herself:
"The Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
stood up to address us (after the
eclipse prayer), and spoke about the
testing that a person will undergo in
the grave. When he mentioned that, the
Muslims panicked somewhat, and this
prevented me from hearing the latter
part of the Prophet's speech. When the
hubbub died down, I asked a man who
was nearby, `May Allah bless you, what
did the Messenger of Allah (PBUH) say
at the end of his speech?' He said,
`"It has been revealed to me that
you will be tested in the grave with
something similar in severity to the
test (fitnah) of the Dajjal
. . ."'17
Bukhari and Muslim also narrate another
report from Asma', in which she says:
"There was a solar eclipse at the
time of the Prophet (PBUH) . . . I
finished what I was doing, then I came
to the mosque. I saw the Messenger of
Allah (PBUH) standing (in prayer), so
I joined him. He stood for so long
that I felt I needed to sit down, but
I noticed a woman who looked weak and
tired and said to myself: This woman
is weaker than I, so I must continue
to stand. Then he bowed, and remained
in that position for a long time; then
he raised his head and stood for such
a long time that anyone who came in at
this point would think that he had not
yet bowed in ruku`. He
completed the prayer when the eclipse
was over, then he addressed the
people, praising and glorifying Allah
(SWT), and saying `Amma ba`d.'"18
During that golden era, the time of the
Prophet (PBUH), the Muslim woman knew
about her religion and was keen to
understand the events and affairs that
concerned the Muslims in this world and
the next. When she heard the call to
prayer, she would rush to the mosque to
hear the words of the Prophet (PBUH)
from the minbar, guiding and
teaching the people. Fatimah bint Qays,
one of the earliest migrant women (muhajirat),
said:
"The people were called to
prayer, so I rushed with the others to
the mosque, and prayed with the
Messenger of Allah (PBUH). I was in
the first row of women, which was just
behind the last row of men."19
It is clear, from the sahih
reports quoted above, that Muslim women
attended the mosque on various occasions
and that this attendance was an approved
custom at the time of the Prophet
(PBUH). Once, a woman was attacked on
her way to the mosque, but this incident
did not make the Prophet (PBUH) have any
reservations about allowing women to go
out to the mosque. He still allowed them
to do so, and forbade men to prevent
them, because there was so much benefit
- spiritual, mental and otherwise - for
them in attending the mosque from time
to time.
Wa'il al-Kindi reported that a woman
was assaulted by a man in the darkness
of the early morning, whilst she was
on her way to the mosque. She shouted
to a passer-by for help, then a large
group of people came by, and she
called to them for help. They seized
the man to whom she had first called
for help, and her attacker ran away.
They brought the (innocent) man to
her, and he said, "I am the one
who answered your call for help; the
other man got away." They brought
him to the Messenger of Allah (PBUH),
and told him that this man had
assaulted the woman, and they had
seized him whilst he was running away.
The man said, "I was the one who
answered her call for help against her
attacker, but these people seized me
and brought me here." The woman
said, "He is lying; he is the one
who attacked me." The Messenger
of Allah (PBUH) said: "Take him
away and stone him." Then a man
stood up and said, "Do not stone
him, stone me, for I am the one who
did it." Now the Messenger of
Allah (PBUH) had three people before
him: the one who had assaulted the
woman, the one who had answered her
cries for help and the woman herself.
He told the attacker, "As for
you, Allah (SWT) has forgiven
you," and he spoke kind words to
the one who had helped the woman.
`Umar said, "Stone the one who
has admitted to the crime of
adultery." The Messenger of Allah
(PBUH) said: "No, for he has
repented to Allah (SWT)" - I
think he said, "with an act of
repentance so great that if the people
of Madinah were to repent in this way,
it would be accepted from them."20
The Prophet (PBUH) appreciated the
circumstances of the women who attended
the congregational prayers, so he used
to be kind to them and would shorten the
prayer if he heard a child crying, so
that the mother would not become
distressed - as we have seen in the
hadith quoted above (see p. 9). Once he
delayed the `isha' prayer, and
`Umar (RAA) called him saying:
"The woman and children have gone
to sleep." The Prophet (PBUH)
came out and said, "No-one on
earth is waiting for this prayer
except you."21
Many sahih reports describe how
the Prophet (PBUH) used to organize
women's attendance at congregational
prayers, for example, the hadith
reported by Muslim:
"The best rows for men are those
at the front, and the worst are those
at the back; the best rows for women
are those at the back, and the worst
are those at the front."22
Another hadith, reported by
Bukhari, deals with giving the women
room to leave the mosque before the
men, after the prayer is over. Hind
bint al-Harith said that Umm Salamah,
the wife of the Prophet (PBUH), told
her that at the time of the Prophet
(PBUH), when the obligatory prayer was
over, the women would get up to leave,
and the Messenger of Allah (PBUH) and
the men who were with him would wait
as long as Allah (SWT) willed. When
the Messenger of Allah (PBUH) got up
to leave, then the men would get up.23
Bukhari and Muslim also report a hadith
concerning how women should draw the imam's
attention to something during the prayer
by clapping. Sahl ibn Sa'd al-Sa'idi
said:
"The Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
said, `Why do I see you clapping so
much? Whoever notices any error in my
prayer should say "Subhan
Allah ," for by doing so he
will alert me to the error. Clapping
is only for women.'"24
The number of women who attended the
mosque increased daily until - at the
time of the Abbasids - they filled the
courtyard of the mosque, and men would
have no choice but to pray behind them.
This was the verdict (fatwa) of
Imam Malik, as recorded in al-Mudawwanah
al-Kubra: Ibn al-Qasim said, `I
asked Malik about people who come to the
mosque and find the courtyard (of the
mosque) filled with women, and the
mosque itself filled with men: may those
men pray with the imam behind the
women?" Malik said: "Their
prayer is valid; they do not have to
repeat it."25
But women's going out to the mosque
should not be a cause of fitnah,
and women should behave in accordance
with Islamic teachings of purity of
thought and behaviour. If for any reason
there is the fear of fitnah
associated with women's going out to the
mosque, then it is better for women to
pray at home, and they should do so.
This is what is indicated by the hadith
of Ibn `Umar, quoted above, in which the
Prophet (PBUH) said:
"Do not stop your women from
going to the mosque, although their
houses are better for them." (See
p. 10)
It appears that some men feared the
possibility of fitnah, and took
this as an excuse to forbid their women
to go to the mosque. This is why the
Prophet (PBUH) forbade men to prevent
women from attending the mosque from
time to time. This is what is indicated
in the first part of the hadith quoted
above. Other Hadith confirm the
Prophet's keenness for women to attend
gatherings in the mosque, for example,
the report of Mujahid ibn `Umar:
"The Prophet (PBUH) said: `Do not
prevent the women from going to the
mosque at night' One of the sons of
`Abdullah ibn `Umar said, `We will not
let them go out because it will give
rise to deviation and suspicion.' Ibn
`Umar rebuked him and said, `I tell
you that the Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
said such-and-such and you say,
"No, we will not let
them"!'"26
Bilal ibn `Abdullah ibn `Umar
reported from his father that the
Prophet (PBUH) said: "Do not deny
the women their share of the mosque,
if they ask your permission."
Bilal said, "By Allah (SWT), we
will most certainly prevent them (from
going to the mosque)!" `Abdullah
(his father) said to him: "I tell
you that the Messengeof Allah (PBUH)
said such-and-such, and you say `We
will most certainly prevent
them'!"27
The Prophet (PBUH) said:
"Do not prevent your women
from attending the mosque if they seek
your permission to do so."28
"Do not prevent the female
servants of Allah (SWT) from attending
the mosques of Allah (SWT)."29
"If your womenfolk seek your
permission to go to the mosque, then
let them do so."30
It is permissible for Muslim women to
attend the gatherings of the Muslims in
the mosque, and there is much to be
gained from them doing so, but certain
conditions apply to this permission, the
most important of which is that the
woman who goes to the mosque should not
wear perfume or make-up. Zaynab
al-Thaqafiyyah reported that the
Messenger of Allah (PBUH) said:
"If any of you (women) wishes to
attend `isha' prayer, she
should not wear perfume that
night."31
Numerous other Hadith also forbid women
to wear perfume when they go to the
mosque, for example:
"If any of you (women) goes to
the mosque, she should not wear
perfume."32
"Any women who has perfumed
herself with incense should not attend
`isha' prayers with us."33
She Attends Eid Prayers
Islam has honoured woman and made her
equal with man as regards obligatory
acts of worship. Women are also
encouraged to attend public gatherings
on Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha, so that
they may take part in these blessed
occasions. This is demonstrated in a
number of Hadith reported by Bukhari and
Muslim, in which we see that the Prophet
(PBUH) commanded that all the women
should come out on these occasions,
including adolescent and prepubescent
girls, those who usually remained in
seclusion, and virgins; he even
commanded that menstruating women should
come out, to take part in the joyous
occasion, but they were to keep away
from the prayer-place itself. His
concern that all women should attend the
prayer on the two Eids was so great that
he ordered the one who had more than one
jilbab (outer garment) to give
one to her sister who had none. In this
way he encouraged both the attendance of
all women at Eid prayers and mutual
support and help to do good and
righteous deeds.
Umm `Atiyyah said:
"The Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
commanded us to bring out to the Eid
prayers the adolescent and
prepubescent girls, those who usually
remained in seclusion, and virgins,
and he ordered those who were
menstruating to keep away from the
prayer-place."34
"We (women) used to be
commanded to go out on the two Eids,
including those who usually stayed in
seclusion, and virgins. The
menstruating women went out too, and
stayed behind the people, joining in
the takbirat."35
"The Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
commanded us to take them out on Eid
al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha, the
adolescent and prepubescent girls, the
menstruating women, and those who
usually remained in seclusion, so that
they could share in the festive
occasions of the Muslims, but the
menstruating women were not to pray. I
said, `O Messenger of Allah (PBUH),
one of us does not have a jilbab.'
He said, `Let her sister dress her in
one of her own jilbabs.'"36
Bukhari reports:
"Muhammad ibn Sallam told us that
`Abd al-Wahhab reported from Ayyub
from Hafsah bint Sirin, who said: `We
used to prevent our prepubescent girls
from going out on the two Eids'".
A woman came and stayed at the
castle of Banu Khalaf, and reported
something from her sister. Her
sister's husband had taken part in
twelve military campaigns with the
Prophet (PBUH), and her sister herself
had accompanied him on six of them.
She said: "We used to take care
of the sick and wounded." Her
sister asked the Prophet (PBUH):
"Is there anything wrong if one
of us does not have a jilbab
and never goes out for that
reason?" He said: "Let her
friend give her one of her jilbabs,
so that she can come out and join the
righteous gatherings of the
Muslims."' Hafsah said: `When Umm
`Atiyyah arrived, I went to her and
asked her, "Did you hear the
Prophet (PBUH) say that?" She
said, "May my father be
sacrificed for him, yes I did. [She
never mentioned him without saying
"may my father be sacrificed for
him"]. I heard him say, `Let the
young girls who usually stay in
seclusion, or the young girls and
those who usually stay in seclusion,
and the menstruating women, go out and
attend the righteous gathering of the
believers, but let the menstruating
women keep away from the prayer-place
itself.'"' Hafsah said: `I asked
her, "Even the menstruating
women?" She said, "Yes, are
menstruating women not present at
`Arafah and on other
occasions?"'"37
Bukhari also narrates another report
from Umm `Atiyyah, in which she says:
"We used to be commanded to go
out on the day of Eid, and we even
brought the virgins out of their
seclusion, and the menstruating women,
who would stay behind the people,
joining in their takbirat and du`a's,
hoping for the blessing and purity of
that day."38
These sahih Hadith give a clear
indication of the Prophet's concern for
the intellectual and spiritual benefit
of women. He ordered all the women to go
out to the Eid prayer, including those
who were menstruating, even though
menstruating women are excused from
praying and are not allowed to enter the
prayer-place itself. But his call was
addressed to all women, because of his
concern that they should take part in
these two blessed events and attend the
righteous gathering of the Muslims,
joining in the takbirat and du`a's,
and being a part of the public life of
Islam which is discussed in the khutbah
following the Eid prayer.
The Prophet (PBUH) was concerned with
the teaching and guidance of women, and
wanted them to play a part in building
the Muslim society, so he devoted part
of his khutbah to women. He would
come to the place where the women were
gathered, and exhort and remind them,
and he made doing this a duty of the imam.
We find this in a hadith narrated
by Bukhari and Muslim from Ibn Jurayj,
who said:
"`Ata' told me: "I heard
Jabir ibn `Abdullah say: `The Prophet
(PBUH) stood up on the occasion of Eid
al-Fitr and led the people in prayer.
He began the prayer before the khutbah.
Then he addressed the people. When the
Prophet of Allah (PBUH) had finished
his khutbah, he came to the
women and spoke to them, whilst
leaning on Bilal's arm, and Bilal
spread out his cloak for the women to
put their sadaqah in it.'"
I [Ibn Jurayj] said to `Ata', `Was it zakat
al-fitr?' He said, `No, it was the
sadaqah that they gave at that
time; one woman threw her ring into
it, then others followed her lead.' I
said to `Ata', `Is it a duty nowadays
for the imam to come to the
women and address them when he has
finished his khutbah?' He said,
`It most certainly is. This is a duty
on them (imams); what is wrong
with them that they do not do that
nowadays?'"39
According to this hadith, the Prophet
(PBUH) exhorted and reminded the women,
and accepted the sadaqah that
they themselves willingly gave. Another hadith,
also narrated by Bukhari and Muslim from
Ibn `Abbas (RAA) via Ibn Tawus adds that
the Prophet (PBUH) also reminded the
women of their bay`ah (oath of
allegiance) and reconfirmed their
adherence to it. Ibn `Abbas said:
"I attended Eid prayers with the
Prophet (PBUH), and (after his death)
with Abu Bakr, `Umar and `Uthman. All
of them used to perform the prayer
before the khutbah. The Prophet
(PBUH) came down (from the minbar)
- and it is as if I can see him now,
gesturing to them to sit down - then
he would come through the crowd, until
he reached the women. Bilal was with
him, and he recited: ( O Prophet!
When believing women come to you to
take the oath of fealty to you, that
they will not associate anything
whatever with Allah . . .) (Qur'an
60:12), until the end of the ayah.
Then he said, `Are you adhering to
that?' Only one woman answered, `Yes,
O Prophet of Allah (PBUH),' and he did
not know at that time who she was40.
He said, `Then give sadaqah,'
and Bilal spread out his cloak. The
Prophet (PBUH) said, `Come on, may my
father and my mother be sacrificed for
you!' So they began to throw their
rings and jewellery onto Bilal's
cloak."41
There is no doubthat the Prophet (PBUH)
addressed the women in the Eid
prayer-place, reminding them about their
religion, and that he took charity from
them, reconfirmed their adherence to
their oath of allegiance, enjoined them
to remember the teachings of Islam, and
motivated them to do good works. All of
this was achieved by calling them to
attend the congregational prayer on both
Eids. This is indicative of the
importance of congregational prayer in
the life of the Muslim individual and
the Islamic society.
Although Islam does not oblige women
to attend congregational prayer in the
mosque, whenever women gather together,
they are encouraged to offer the fard
prayers in congregation. In this case,
the one who is leading them in prayer
should stand in the middle of the
(first) row, not in front, and they do
not have to recite the adhan or iqamah.
This is what Umm Salamah, the wife of
the Prophet (PBUH), used to do when she
led other women in prayer.42
She Prays Sunnah and Nafil
Prayers
The Muslim women does not limit
herself to the five daily obligatory
prayers; she also prays those sunnah
prayers which the Prophet (PBUH) used to
perform regularly (al-rawatib),
and prays as many of the nafil
(supererogatory) prayers as her time and
energy allow. These prayers include salat
al-duha, sunnah prayers
following maghrib, and prayers
offered at night. Nafil prayers
bring a person closer to Allah (SWT),
earn him or her the love and pleasure of
Allah (SWT), and make him or her one of
the victorious, obedient and righteous
ones. There is no clearer indication of
the great status attained by the
believer who draws closer to Allah (SWT)
by performing nafil deeds than
the hadith qudsi:
"My servant continues to draw
near to Me with supererogatory works
so that I will love him. When I love
him, I am his hearing with which he
hears, his seeing with which he sees,
his hand with which he strikes, and
his foot with which he walks. Were he
to ask [something] of Me, I would
surely give it to him; and were he to
ask Me for refuge, I would surely
grant him it."43
Because of Allah's (SWT) love for His
servant, that person will be loved by
the inhabitants of heaven and earth, as
is described in a report narrated by Abu
Hurayrah in which the Prophet (PBUH)
said:
"When Allah (SWT) loves one of
His servants, He calls Jibril and
tells him: `I love so-and-so, so love
him.' Then Jibril will love him, and
will proclaim to the inhabitants of
heaven: `Allah (SWT) loves so-and-so,
so love him.' So the inhabitants of
heaven will love him too, and he will
be well accepted by the inhabitants of
the earth. If Allah (SWT) hates one of
His servants, He calls Jibril and
tells him: `I hate so-and-so, so hate
him.' Then Jibril will hate him and
will proclaim to the inhabitants of
heaven: `Allah (SWT) hates so-and-so,
so hate him.' Then the inhabitants of
heaven will hate him and he will also
be detested by the inhabitants of
earth."44
The Prophet (PBUH) used to pray so
much at night that his feet would
become swollen. `A'ishah (May Allah be
pleased with her) asked him: "Why
do you do this, O Messenger of Allah
(PBUH), when has forgiven all your
past and future sins?" He
answered, "Should I not be a
grateful servant?"45
The Prophet's wife Zaynab (May
Allah be pleased with her) used to
perform nafil prayers, and make
them lengthy. She put up a rope
between two columns (in the mosque),
so that when she felt tired and
exhausted she could lean against it
and restore her energy. The Messenger
of Allah (PBUH) entered the mosque,
saw the rope, and asked, "What is
this?" The people told him,
"It belongs to Zaynab: she prays,
and when she feels tired, she leans
against it." He said, "Untie
it; let any of you pray as long as he
has the energy to do so, and if he
feels tired, he can sit down (or: let
him sit down)."46
A woman of Banu Asad, whose name
was al-Hawla' bint Tuwayt, used to
pray all night, and never sleep. One
day she called on `A'ishah when the
Prophet (PBUH) was present. `A'ishah
told him, "This is al-Hawla' bint
Tuwayt. They say that she never sleeps
at night." The Messenger of Allah
(PBUH) said: "She never sleeps at
night! Do only as much as you can, for
by Allah (SWT), Allah (SWT) never gets
tired, although you do."47
The Prophet (PBUH) encouraged Muslim men
and women to do more nafil deeds,
but at the same time he told them to be
balanced in their approach to worship,
and disliked exaggeration therein. He
wanted the Muslims to have a balanced
personality, so that their worship would
be enthusiastic, but consistent, and
would not be so burdensome that people
would not be able to persist in it. He
also taught that the most beloved deed
in the sight of Allah (SWT) is that
which is done continuously, even if it
is a little, as is stated in the hadith
in which `A'ishah (May Allah be pleased
with her) said:
"The Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
said: ` The most beloved deed to Allah
(SWT) is that which is continuous,
even if it is little.'" If
`A'ishah started to do something, she
would adhere to it.48
This attitude of keeping up the habit of
doing righteous deeds was not confined
to `A'ishah alone; it was the attitude
of all members of the Prophet's
household, and of those who were nearest
and dearest to him. We see this in the
hadith reported by Muslim from `A'ishah
(May Allah be pleased with her):
"The Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
had a mat which he used for making a
compartment at night in which he would
pray, and the people began to pray
with him; he used to spread the mat
during the day time. The people
crowded around him one night. He then
said, `O people, perform only such
acts as you are capable of doing, for
Allah (SWT) does not grow weary but
you will get tired. The acts most
pleasing to Allah (SWT) are those
which are done continuously, even if
they are small.' And it was the habit
of the family of Muhammad (PBUH) that
whenever they did any deed they did it
continuously."49
She Performs Her Prayers Properly
The true Muslim tries hard to perform
her prayers properly, with deep
concentration and precision of physical
movements. She thinks about the meaning
of the ayat she is reciting, and
the words of praise and glorification
that she is uttering. Her soul is
flooded with fear of Allah (SWT), and
with gratitude to Him and sincere
worship of Him. If the Titan
happens to whisper some idea to her
during the prayer, to distract her from
concentrating properly, to keep him away
she focuses on the words that she is
reciting from the Qur'an, and the words
of praise that she is uttering.
The Muslim woman does not rush back
to her housework and chores when she has
finished her prayer. Rather, as the
Prophet (PBUH) used to do, she asks
Allah (SWT)'s forgiveness by saying
"Astaghfir-Allah" three
times, and repeats the du`a':
"Allahumma anta al-salam wa
minka al-salam, tabaraka ya dha'l-jalali
wa'l-ikram (O Allah (SWT), You are
Peace and from You comes peace, Blessed
are You, O Lord of majesty and
honour.)"50 Then she
repeats the adhkar and du`a's
that the Prophet (PBUH) is known to have
recited after completing his prayer.
There are many such adhkar51,
one of the most important of which is to
repeat "Subhan Allah"
thirty-three times, "La ilaha
ill-Allah" thirty-three times,
"Allahu akbar"
thirty-three times, then to complete one
hundred with "La illaha
ill-Allah wahdahu la shaika lah,
lahu'l-mulk wa lahu'l-hamd, wa huwa `ala
kulli shayin qadir." According
to a sahih hadith, the Prophet
(PBUH) said:
"Whoever glorifies Allah (SWT)
(says subhan Allah) after every
prayer thirty three times, praises
Allah (SWT) (says al-hamdu lillah)
thirty three times, and magnifies
Allah (SWT) (says Allahu akbar)
thirty-three times, which adds up to
ninety-nine, then completes one
hundred by saying La illaha
ill-Allah wahdahu la shaika lah,
lahu'l-mulk wa lahu'l-hamd, wa huwa
`ala kulli shayin qadir, his sins
will be forgiven, even if they were
like the foam of the sea."52
Then she turns to Allah (SWT) humbly
asking Him to correct all her affairs,
in this world and next, and to bless her
abundantly and guide her in everything.
Thus the Muslim woman finishes her
prayers, purified in heart and mind and
reinvigorated with a dose of spiritual
energy, which will help her to cope with
the burdens of everyday life, knowing
that she is under the protection of
Allah (SWT). She will not panic if
anything bad befalls her, nor will she
become miserly if she enjoys good
fortune. This is the attitude of those
righteous women who pray and fear Allah
(SWT):
( Truly man was created very
impatient; Fretful when evil touches
him; and niggardly when good reaches
him. Not so those devoted to Prayer.
Those who remain steadfast to their
prayer; And those in whose wealth is a
recognized right For the [needy] who
asks and him who is prevented [for
some reason from asking]) (Qur'an
70:19-25)
She Pays Zakat on Her Wealth
The Muslim women pay zakat on her
wealth, if she is wealthy enough to be
liable for zakat. Every year at a
specified time, she calculates how much
she owns and pays what she has to,
because zakat is a pillar of
Islam, and there can be no compromise or
excuse when it comes to paying it every
year, even if the amount comes to
thousands or millions. It would never
occur to the true Muslim woman to try to
avoid paying some of the zakat
that she is obliged to pay.
Zakat is a clearly-defined
financial obligation and act of
worship which Allah (SWT) has enjoined
upon every Muslim, man or women, who
owns the minimum amount (nisab)
or more. Withholding zakat, or
denying that it is obligatory, is
tantamount to apostasy (riddah)
and kufr, for which a person
may be fought and even killed, until
or unless he pays in full as required
by Islam. The words of Abu Bakr (RAA)
concerning the apostates who withheld
their zakat echo down the
centuries to us: "By Allah (SWT)
I will fight whoever separates salat
from zakat."53
These immortal words demonstrate the
greatness of this religion, which made
the connection between
"religious" and
"secular" affairs, and reveal
Abu Bakr's deep understanding of the
nature of this integrated, holistic way
of life, which combines abstract beliefs
with the practical application of their
principles. Many ayat of the
Qur'an confirm the interdependence of salat
and zakat in the structure of
faith:( . . .Those who establish
regular prayer and regular charity . .
.) (Qur'an 5:55) ( And be
steadfast in prayer: practise regular
charity.) (Qur'an 2:43) ( . . .
[those who] . . . establish prayers and
regular charity) (Qur'an 2:277)
It is clear to the true Muslim woman
that Islam - although it has given her
the right to financial independence, and
has not obliged her to support herself
or others, which is, rather, the duty of
men - has indeed enjoined zakat
on her, and has made zakat a
right to which the poor are entitled. So
the Muslim woman would not hesitate to
pay it in the ways prescribed by shari`ah.
She cannot claim to be excused because
she is a woman and no woman is obliged
to spend on others. Any woman who makes
such a claim has a poor understanding of
Islam, her faith is weak and there is
some fault in her personality. Or else
she is a woman who appears to be
religious, but she is ignorant and
negligent, or is stingy and loves money,
and it would never occur to her to pay zakat
even though she fasts, prays and
performs Hajj, and occasionally gives a
small charitable donation from her great
wealth. These types of women - ignorant
or stingy - are nothing like the true
Muslim woman as envisaged by Islam.
She Fasts During the Day and Prays
at Night in Ramadan
The true Muslim woman fasts the month
of Ramadan, and her soul is filled with
faith that: "Whoever fasts Ramadan
out of faith and hope of reward, all his
previous sins will be forgiven."54
She has the attitude of one who truly
fasts, whose faculties keep away from
all kinds of sins that may invalidate
the fast or diminish its reward. If she
finds herself exposed to the trials of
hostility or argument, she follows the
Prophet's advice to men and women who
fast:
"When any of you is fasting, he
should not utter foul words or raise
his voice in anger. If then anyone
provokes or fights him, he should say,
`I am observing a fast.'"55
"Whoever does not give up
false speech and evil actions, Allah
(SWT) has no need of his giving up his
food and drink."56
During Ramadan, the true Muslim woman
feels that she is immersed in the
atmosphere of a month unlike any other,
when good deeds should be multiplied and
the gates of goodness should be opened
wide. She knows that her fasting during
this month should be only for Allah
(SWT), and that He will give the reward
for it, for the reward of Allah (SWT),
the Bountiful and Munificent, is greater
and vaster than anyone could even
imagine:
"The reward for every good deed
of the sons of Adam will be multiplied
anywhere between ten and seven hundred
times. Allah (SWT) said: `Except for
fasting, because it is for Me and I
Myself will give recompense for it. He
gives up his food and his passion for
Me.' For the one who fasts, there are
two times of rejoicing, one when he
breaks the fast, and one when he meets
his Lord. Verily the smell that comes
from the mouth of one who is fasting
is more pleasing to Allah (SWT) than
the scent of musk."57
Therefore the wise Muslim woman must
strike a balance, during this
all-too-short blessed month, between her
domestic duties and the opportunity this
month brings to draw closer to Allah
(SWT) through worship and good deeds.
She should not let her household chores
distract her from performing the
obligatory prayers at the appointed
times, or from reading Qur'an or praying
nafil prayers. Nor should she let
traditional late-night family gatherings
keep her from praying qiyam al-layl
and tahujjud, and making du`a'.
She knows the great reward and abundant
forgiveness that Allah (SWT) has
prepared for those who stay up to pray
during the night in Ramadan:
"Whoever spends the night in
prayer during Ramadan out of faith and
hope of reward, all his previous sins
will be forgiven."58
The Prophet (PBUH) used to strive to do
more good deeds during Ramadan than at
other times, especially during the last
ten days of it:
`A'ishah (May Allah be pleased with
her) said:
"The Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
used to strive during Ramadan, and
especially the last ten days of it,
more than he used to at other
times."59
`A'ishah (May Allah be pleased with her)
also said:
"When the last ten days of
Ramadan began, the Messenger of Allah
(PBUH) would sty up for the whole
night, wake his family up, strive
extra hard, and abstain from marital
relations."60
The Prophet (PBUH) used to command the
Muslims to seek laylat al-qadr,
and encouraged them to spend that night
in prayer:
"Seek laylat al-qadr
during the last ten days of
Ramadan."61
"Whoever spends the night of laylat
al-qadr in prayer and worship out
of faith and hope of reward, all his
previous sins will be forgiven."62
This blessed month is a time that is
purely for worship. The serious-minded
Muslim woman has no time to spend on
chatting and idle pursuits throughout
the night. She should not be among those
who while away the night until dawn
approaches, whereupon she offers her
family something to eat and they fall
into a deep sleep, and may even miss the
fajr prayer!
The true Muslim woman and her family
should live an Islamic life during
Ramadan, striving to organize themselves
in such a way that when they all come
back from tarawih prayers, they
do not stay up for too long, because in
a few short hours' time, they will get
up to pray qiyam al-layl and then
eat suhur, for the Prophet (PBUH)
commanded us to eat suhur, as
there is much benefit in it:
"Eat suhur, for in suhur
there is blessing."63
The true Muslim woman helps all the
members of her family to get up for suhur,
in obedience to the command of the
Prophet (PBUH) and in the hope of
obtaining the blessings of suhur,
such as the reminder to pray qiyam
al-layl, and encouragement to go out
to the mosque to pray fajr in
congregation, awell as the physical
benefits of strengthening the body for
the day's fast. This is what the Prophet
(PBUH) used to do and trained his
Companions to do likewise:
Zayd ibn Thabit (RAA) said:
"We ate suhur with the
Messenger of Allah (PBUH), then we got
up to pray." Someone asked,
"How much time was there between
the two?" He said: "Fifty ayat
[i.e. the time it would take to recite
fifty ayat]."64
There is no doubt that Allah (SWT) will
increase the reward of the Muslim woman
who is the means of bringing these
blessings to her family during Ramadan:
( As to those who believe and work
righteousness, verily We shall not
suffer to perish the reward of any who
do a [single] righteous deed.) (Qur'an18:30)
She Observes Nafil Fasts
The true Muslim woman also observes nafil
fasts at times other than Ramadan, if it
is not too difficult for her to do so.
So she fasts the day of `Arafat, and
`Ashura', and the ninth day of Muharram,
because fasting on these days and others
is one of the righteous deeds that may
expiate sins, as the Prophet (PBUH) told
us:
Abu Qutadah (RAA) said:
"The Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
was asked about fasting on the day of
`Arafat, and he said: `It is an
expiation for the sins of the previous
year and the current year.'"65
Ibn `Abbas (RAA) said that the
Messenger of Allah (PBUH) fasted the
day of `Ashura', and commanded others
to fast on this day too.66
Abu Qutadah (RAA) said that the
Messenger of Allah (PBUH) was asked
about fasting on the day of `Ashura',
and he said: "It is an expiation
for the sins of the previous
year."67
Ibn `Abbas said:
"The Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
said: `If I am still alive next year,
I will fast on the ninth day (of
Muharram).'"68
Fasting six days of Shawwal is also
encouraged, as the Prophet (PBUH) said:
"Whoever fasted Ramadan then
followed it with six days of Shawwal,
it will be as if he fasted for a
lifetime."69
It is also recommended to fast for three
days of each month, concerning which Abu
Hurayrah (RAA) said:
"My dearest friend (i.e., the
Prophet (PBUH)) advised me to do three
things: to fast for three days of each
month, to pray two rak`ahs of duha
prayer, and never to sleep until I
pray witr."70
Abu'l-Darda' (RAA) said:
"My beloved friend (PBUH) advised
me to do three things that I shall
never give up as long as I live: to
fast three days of each month, to pray
duha, and not to sleep until I
have prayed witr."71
`Abdullah ibn `Amr ibn al-`As (RAA)
said:
"The Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
said: `Fasting for three days of each
month is like fasting for an entire
lifetime.'"72
Some reports describe these three days
as being the thirteenth, fourteenth and
fifteenth of each month, which are
called al-ayyam al-bid (the white
days); other reports state that the
Prophet (PBUH) used to fast on three
unspecified days of each month.
Mu`adhah al-`Adawiyyah said:
"I asked `A'ishah (May Allah be
pleased with her), `Did the Messenger
of Allah (PBUH) used to fast three
days in each month?' She said, `Yes.'
I asked her, `In which part of the
month did he used to fast?' She said,
`He did not mind in which part of the
month he would fast.'"73
She goes on Hajj to the sacred
House of Allah(SWT).
The true Muslim woman intends to go
on Hajj to the House of Allah (SWT) when
she is able to do so and it is easy for
her to travel. Before she sets out on
her journey, she takes the time to study
the rules (ahkam) of Hajj in
depth, so that when she begins to
perform the rituals of Hajj, her actions
will be based on true understanding and
her Hajj will be complete according to
the conditions laid down by the shari`ah.
It will also be the equivalent of jihad
for men, as the Prophet (PBUH) described
it in a hadith narrated by `A'ishah (May
Allah be pleased with her):
"I [`A'ishah] said: `O Messenger
of Allah (PBUH), can we (women) not go
out on military expeditions and fight
in jihad with you (men)?' He
said, `You (women) have the best of jihad,
and the best of it is Hajj, a blessed
Hajj.'" `A'ishah said, "I
should never stop going for Hajj after
I heard this from the Messenger of
Allah (PBUH)."74
She goes for `Umbra
Just as Hajj is obligatory for the
Muslim woman, so also is `Umbra, if she
is able to go - especially `Umbra during
Ramadan, the reward for which is
equivalent to that for performing Hajj
with the Prophet (PBUH). This is seen in
the hadith narrated by Imam
Bukhari from Ibn `Abbas (RAA) who said:
"When the Prophet (PBUH) came
back from Hajj, he said to Umm Sinan
al-Ansariyyah, `What stopped you from
going to Hajj?' She said, `Abu
so-and-so - meaning her husband - has
two camels; he took one to go to Hajj,
and we need the other to irrigate our
land.' He said, `When Ramadan comes,
go for `Umbra, for `Umbra in Ramadan
is a Hajj.'" According to another
report also narrated by Ibn `Abbas,
the Prophet (PBUH) said: "For
`Umbra in Ramadan is equivalent to
(performing) Hajj with me."75She is obedient to the commands of
Allah (SWT)
The true Muslim woman does not forget
that she is duty bound to perform all
the religious duties that Allah (SWT)
has commanded her to do. In this regard
her situation is the same as that of a
man, and there is no difference between
them except in a few regulations which
apply exclusively to either men or
women. Other than that, women and men
are equally responsible before Allah
(SWT).
Allah (SWT) says:
( For Muslim men and women, for
believing men and women, for devout
men and women, for true men and women,
for men and women who are patient and
constant, for men and women who humble
themselves, for men and women who give
in charity, for men and women who fast
[and deny themselves], for men and
women who guard their chastity, and
for men and women who engage much in
Allah's praise - for them has Allah
prepared forgiveness and great
reward.) (Qur'an 33:35)
( Whoever works righteousness,
man or woman, and has Faith, verily,
to him will We give a new Life, and
life that is good and pure, and We
will bestow on such their reward
according to the best of their
actions.) (Qur'an 16:97)
( And their Lord has accepted of
them, and answered them: `Never will I
suffer to be lost the work of any of
you, be he male or female: you are
members, one of another; those who
have left their homes and were driven
out therefrom, and suffered harm in My
Cause, and fought and were slain -
verily, I will blot out from them
their iniquities, and admit them into
Gardens with rivers flowing beneath -
a reward from the Presence of Allah,
and from His Presence is the best of
rewards.) (Qur'an 3:195)
Whenever the phrase "ya
ayyuha'l-nas (O people or O
mankind)" appears in the Qur'an or
Hadith, it includes both men and women.
Evidence of this may be found in the
hadith narrated by Imam Muslim from the
Prophet's wife Umm Salamah (May Allah be
pleased with her), who said:
"I used to hear the people
talking about al-hawd (the
cistern), and I had never heard about
it from the Messenger of Allah (PBUH).
One day, whilst a young girl was
combing my hair, I heard the Messenger
of Allah (PBUH) saying "O
people!" I said to the young
girl, "Leave me alone now."
She said, "That call is for men
only; he is not calling the
women." I said, "I am one of
the people." The Messenger of
Allah (PBUH) said: "I am the one
who will be at the cistern (in the
Hereafter) before you. So be careful,
lest one of you should come to me and
be driven away like a stray camel. I
will ask the reason why, and I will be
told, `You do not know what
innovations they wrought after your
death,' and I will say, `Away with
them!'" According to another
report also narrated by Muslim, he
(PBUH) said: ". . . and I will
say, `Away, away with the one who
changed (the religion) after my
death!'"76
Men and women are equal before Allah
(SWT), and both must pay heed to His
commands and prohibitions. So the Muslim
woman does what Allah (SWT) has
commanded and keeps away from what He
has forbidden, believing that she will
be questionedabout what she did in this
life: if they are good, it will be good
for her, and if they are bad, then will
be bad for her. She does not transgress
the limits laid down by Allah (SWT), and
does not do anything that is haram.
She always seeks the ruling of Allah
(SWT) and His Messenger, and accepts it
no matter what happens to her in her
life.
Islamic history is filled with the
stories of great women who kept the rule
of Allah (SWT) in mind at all times and
did not deviate from it or look for
alternatives. Among these stories is
that of Khawlah bint Tha`labah and her
husband Aws ibn al-Samit, narrated by
Imam Ahmad and Abu Dawud, and quoted by
Ibn Kathir in his tafsir of the
beginning of Surat al-Mujadilah.
Khawlah said:
"By Allah (SWT), concerning me
and Aws ibn al-Samit, Allah (SWT)
revealed the beginning of Surat
al-Mujadilah. I was married to
him, and he was an old man who was
bad-tempered. One day, he came in and
I raised a particular issue with him
again; he became angry and said, `You
are to me as the back of my mother.'
Then he went out and sat for a while
in the meeting-place of his people.
Then he came back, and wanted to
resume marital relations with me. I
said, `No way! By the hand of the One
in Whose hand is the soul of Khuwaylah
(i.e., Khawlah), you will never get
what you want from me after saying
what you said, until Allah (SWT) and
His Messenger decide between us.' He
tried to force himself on me, but I
was able to resist because I was a
young woman and he was a weak old man.
I pushed him away, then I went to one
of my (female) neighbours and borrowed
a cloak from her and went to the
Messenger of Allah (PBUH). I sat
before him, told him what (my husband)
had done to me, and began to complain
to him about my sufferings because of
my husband's bad temper. The Messenger
of Allah (PBUH) said, `O Khuwaylah,
your cousin is an old man, so fear
Allah (SWT) with regard to him.' I did
not leave him until Qur'an was
revealed concerning me: he was
overcome as he usually was when Qur'an
was revealed to him, and when it was
over, he said: `O Khuwaylah, Allah
(SWT) has revealed Qur'an concerning
you and your husband.' Then he recited
to me:
( Allah has indeed heard [and
accepted] the statement of the woman
who pleads with you concerning her
husband and carries her complaint [in
prayer] to Allah: and Allah [always]
hears the arguments between both sides
among you: for Allah hears and sees
[all things]'. If any men among you
divorce their wives by zihar77
[calling them mothers], they cannot be
their mothers: none can be their
mothers except those who gave them
birth. And in fact they use words
[both] iniquitous and false: but truly
Allah is One that blots out [sins],
and forgives [again and again]. But
those who divorce their wives by zihar,
then wish to go back on the words they
uttered - [it is ordained that such a
one] should free a slave before they
touch each other: this are you
admonished to perform: and Allah is
well-acquainted with [all] that you
do. And if any has not [the
wherewithal], he should fast for two
months consecutively before they touch
each other. But if any is unable to do
so, he should feed sixty indigent
ones. This, that you may show your
faith in Allah and His Messenger,
those are limits [set by] Allah. For
those who reject [Him], there is a
grievous Penalty.) (Qur'an 58:1-4)
He told me, `Let him release a
slave.' I said, `O Messenger of Allah
(PBUH), he does not have the means to
do that.' He said, `Then let him fast
for two consecutive months.' I said,
`By Allah (SWT), he is an old man, he
is not able to do that.' He said,
`Then let him feed sixty poor people
with a wasq78 of
dates.' I said, `O Messenger of Allah
(SWT), he does not have that much.' He
said, `Then we will help him with a faraq79
of dates.' I said, `And I will help
him with another faraq, O
Messenger of Allah (SWT).' He said,
`You have done right and done well. Go
and give it in charity on his behalf,
then take care of your cousin
properly.' And I did so."80
Khawlah bint Tha`labah could not bear to
stay for one moment with her husband
after he had spoken the words of zihar
to her, which was a form of divorce at
the time of jahiliyyah, until she
had referred the matter to the Prophet
(PBUH), so that she might know how Allah
(SWT) would judge between her and her
husband. She did not even have a
suitable garment with which to go out
and appear before the Prophet (PBUH), so
she borrowed a robe from one of her
neighbours, and rushed to where the
Prophet (PBUH) was sitting, so that she
could hear Allah's (SWT) ruling
concerning her, and follow it.
It comes as no surprise that this
great woman enjoyed such high standing
among the Sahabah who were her
contemporaries and knew her virtues,
above all `Umar ibn al-Khattab (RAA).
She met him one day outside the mosque,
when al-Jarud al-`Abdi was with him.
`Umar, who was the khalifah at
that time, greeted her, and she said to
him, "O `Umar, I remember you when
you were called `Umayr in the
marketplace of `Ukaz, taking care of the
sheep with your stick. So fear Allah
(SWT) in your role as khalifah
taking care of the people, and know that
the one who fears the threat of
punishment in the Hereafter realises
that it is not far away, and the one who
fears death fears missing some
opportunity in this life." Al-Jarud
said, "You have spoken too harshly
to Amir al-Mu'minin, woman!"
`Umar said, "Let her be. Do you not
know that this is Khawlah, to whose
words Allah (SWT) listened from above
the seven heavens? By Allah (SWT), `Umar
should by rights listen to her."
Ibn Kathir mentions in his Tafsir
that a man said to `Umar, when he saw
him welcoming her warmly and listening
to her, "You left a man of
Quraysh to come to this old
woman?" `Umar said, "Woe to
you! Do you not know who this
is?" The man said,
"No." `Umar said, "This
is a woman whose complaint Allah (SWT)
listened to from above the seven
heavens: this is Khawlah bint
Tha`labah. By Allah (SWT), if she did
not leave me until night fell, I would
not tell her to leave until she had
got what she came for, unless the time
for prayer came, in which case I would
pray, and then come back to her until
she had got what she came for."
The true Muslim woman always bears in
mind the words of Allah (SWT):
( It is not fitting for a Believer,
man or woman, when a matter has been
decided by Allah and His Messenger, to
have any option about their decision:
if anyone disobeys Allah and His
Messenger, he is indeed on a clearly
wrong Path.) (Qur'an 33:36)
Obedience to Allah (SWT) and His
Messenger is much more important than
one's own whims and desires; it comes
before pleasure and individual choice.
Zaynab bint Jahsh (May Allah be
pleased with her) set the best example
of obedience to the command of Allah
(SWT) and His Messenger when he asked
her to agree to marry his freed slave
and adopted son Zayd ibn Harithah.
This marriage achieved two legislative
(tashri`i) aims:
(1) To achieve total equality among
people: the beautiful woman of
Quraysh, the noblewoman of the sons of
`Abdu Shams, and the cousin of the
Prophet, married a freed slave. Freed
slaves were of a lower class than the
nobility; indeed, the differences
between the classes was so great and
so deep that nothing could abolish it
except a decisive, public act on the
part of the Prophet (PBUH), that the
Muslim community would have to take as
an example, so that these barriers
might be torn down and people would
not be viewed as superior except in
terms of their level of taqwa.
(2) to abolish the custom of
adoption which was widely spread at
the time of jahiliyyah. Hence
the Prophet (PBUH) married Zaynab,
after she had been divorced by his
adopted son Zayd, to demonstrate in
practical terms that if Zayd had been
his real son, Allah (SWT) would not
have commanded him in the Qur'an to
marry Zaynab.
The choice fell to Zaynab, the
cousin of the Prophet (PBUH), to
achieve these two legislative aims
within the environment of the
Prophet's household, so that the
people could accept them in obedience
to the command of Allah (SWT) and His
Messenger (PBUH). When he chose her
tbe the wife of Zayd ibn Harithah, she
disliked the idea, and said, "O
Messenger of Allah (PBUH), I will
never marry him, for I am the
noblewoman of the tribe of `Abdu
Shams." The Prophet (PBUH)
replied, calmly but firmly, "You
have to marry him." Whilst they
were discussing the matter, Allah
(SWT) revealed to His Messenger
(PBUH):
( It is not fitting for a
Believer, man or woman, when a matter
has been decided by Allah and His
Messenger, to have any option about
their decision: if anyone disobeys
Allah and His Messenger, he is indeed
on a clearly wrong Path.) (Qur'an
33:36)
Then Zaynab accepted the command of
Allah (SWT) and His Messenger, and
said: "I will not disobey Allah
(SWT) and His Messenger, and I will
give myself in marriage to him."
Subsequently, the differences
between Zaynab and Zayd led to their
divorce. When Zaynab had completed her
`iddah, Allah (SWT) revealed
the following ayah:
( Behold! You did say to one who
had received the grace of Allah and
your favour: `Retain [in wedlock] your
wife, and fear Allah.' But you did
hide in your heart that which Allah
was about to make manifest: you did
fear the people, but it is more
fitting that you should fear Allah.
Then when Zayd had dissolved [his
marriage] with her, with the necessary
[formality], We joined her 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 with
the necessary [formality] [their
marriage] with them. And Allah's
command must be fulfilled.) (Qur'an
33:37)
The Prophet (PBUH) recited this ayah,
smiling, then he said, "Who will
go to Zaynab and tell her the good
news that Allah (SWT) has arranged my
marriage to her from heaven?"
It was as if Allah (SWT) was
rewarding Zaynab for her absolute
obedience to Allah (SWT) and His
Messenger. She had accepted their
decision that she should marry Zayd,
then she became the wife of the
Prophet (PBUH) by the command of Allah
(SWT), in ayat which the
Muslims will recite when they worship
Allah (SWT) by reciting the Qur'an,
until the end of time. This honour was
bestowed only on Zaynab, who was
unique among the wives of the Prophet
(PBUH). She was proud of the favour of
Allah (SWT) to her, and used to boast
to the other wives of the Prophet:
"Your families arranged your
marriages, but Allah (SWT) arranged my
marriage from above the seven
heavens."81
She does not sit alone with a
"stranger"
Obedience to Allah (SWT) and His
Messenger can only be achieved by
following their commands and keeping
away from that which they have
prohibited. One way in which the Muslim
woman obeys Allah (SWT) and His
Messenger is by not sitting alone with a
"stranger" (ajnabi)
i.e., a man to whom she is not related,
because doing so is haram
according to the consensus of the
scholars, on the basis of the hadith:
"A man should not sit alone with
a woman unless a mahram is with
her, and a woman should not travel
without a mahram." A man
stood up and said: "O Messenger
of Allah (PBUH), my wife has set out
for Hajj, and I have enlisted for
such-and-such a military
expedition." He said, "Go
and perform Hajj with your wife."82
The mahram is a man to whom
marriage is forever forbidden for a
woman, such as the father, brother,
paternal uncle, maternal uncle, etc.
The ajnabi or
"stranger" is a man to whom
marriage is allowed in principle, even
if he is a relative, especially the
husband's brother and other similarly
close relatives. It is forbidden for a
woman to sit alone with all of these,
because the Prophet (PBUH) said :
"Beware of entering upon
women." A man of the Ansar
asked, "O Messenger of Allah
(PBUH), what about the
brother-in-law?" He said,
"The brother-in-law is
death."83
The brother-in-law is the husband's
brother or other similarly close
relatives by marriage. The Prophet's
words, "The brother-in-law is
death" mean that evil is more
likely to occur from these quarters than
from elsewhere, because of the ease with
which he enters his brother's house. The
word "death" is used for
emphasis and as a sharp warning, as if
sitting alone with the brother-in-law
may lead to immorality and calamitous
consequences that would be akin to the
calamity of death.
The true Muslim woman does not fall
into such errors as are committed by so
many careless people nowadays.
She wears correct hijab
The Muslim woman wears correct hijab
when she goes out of her house. Hijab
is the distinctive Islamic dress whose
features have been clearly defined by
the Qur'an and Sunnah. She does not go
out of the house, or appear before non-mahram
men, wearing perfume, make-up or other
fineries, because she knows that this is
haram according to the Qur'an:
( And say to the believing women
that they should lower their gaze and
guard their modesty; that they should
not display their beauty and ornaments
except what [must ordinarily] appear
thereof; that they should draw their
veils over their bosoms84
and not display their beauty except to
their husbands, their fathers, their
husbands' fathers, their sons, their
husbands' sons, their brothers or
their brothers' sons, or their
sisters' sons, or their women, or the
slaves whom their right hands possess,
or male servants free of physical
needs, or small children who have no
sense of the shame of sex; and that
they should not strike their feet in
order to draw attention to their
hidden ornaments. And O you Believers!
Turn all together towards Allah, that
you may attain Bliss.)
(Qur'an 24:31)
The Muslim woman, therefore, is not one
of those dressed-but-naked women who
abound in societies which have deviated
from the guidance of Allah (SWT). She
would tremble with fear at the
terrifying picture which the Prophet
(PBUH) draw of those painted and adorned
temptresses who have gone astray:
"There are two types of the
people of Hell that I have not seen:
people with whips like the tails of
oxen, with which they beat the people,
and women who are dressed yet still
appear naked, who are inclined to evil
and make their husbands incline
towards it also. Their heads are like
the humps of camels, leaning to one
side. They will not enter Paradise, or
even smell its scent, although its
scent can be discerned from
such-and-such a distance."85
The Muslim woman who has been truly
guided by her faith and has received a
sound Islamic education does not wear hijab
just because it is a custom or tradition
inherited from her mother or
grandmother, as some foolish men and
women try to describe it with no
evidence or logic whatsoever. The Muslim
woman wears hijab on the basis of
her belief that it is a command from
Allah (SWT), revealed to protect the
Muslim woman, to make her character
distinct, and to keep her away from the
slippery slope of immorality and error.
So she accepts it willingly and with
strong conviction, as the women of the Muhajirin
and Ansar accepted it on the day
when Allah (SWT) revealed His clear and
wise command. According to a report
narrated by Bukhari, `A'ishah (May Allah
be pleased with her) said:
"May Allah have mercy on the Muhajir
women. When Allah (SWT) revealed ( .
. . that they should draw their veils
over their bosoms . . .) (Qur'an
24:31), they tore their wrappers and
covered their heads and faces with
them."
According to another report given by
Bukhari, `A'ishah said:
"They took their wrappers and
tore them at the edges, then covered
their heads and faces with them."86
Safiyyah bint Shaybah said:
"When we were with `A'ishah (May
Allah be pleased with her), we
mentioned the women of Quraysh and
their virtues. `A'ishah (May Allah be
pleased with her) said, `The women of
Quraysh are good, but by Allah (SWT) I
have never seen any better or more
strict in their adherence to the Book
of Allah (SWT) than the women of the Ansar.
When Surat al-Nur was revealed
- ( . . . that they should draw
their veils over their bosoms . . .) -
their menfolk went to them and recited
to them the words that Allah (SWT) had
revealed. Each man recited it to his
wife, his daughter, his sister and
other female relatives. Every woman
among them got up, took her wrapper,
and wrapped herself up in it out of
faith and belief in what Allah (SWT)
had revealed. They appeared behind the
Messenger of Allah (PBUH), wrapped up,
as if there were crows on their
heads."87
May Allah (SWT) have mercy on the women
of the Muhajirin and the Ansar:
how strong their faith was, and how
sincere their Islam! How beautiful was
their obedience to the truth when it was
revealed! Every woman who truly believes
in Allah (SWT) and His Messenger cannot
but follow the example of these virtuous
women, so she herself must wear the
distinctive Islamic dress with no regard
to the nakedness and wanton display that
surrounds her. I remember a young
university student who wore hijab,
whose attitude was no less admirable
than that of the women of the Muhajirin
and Ansar, may Allah (SWT) be
pleased with them: when a journalist who
was visiting the University of Damascus
asked her about her hijab and
whether it was not too hot for her in
the extreme heat of summer, she
responded by quoting: ( Say: `The
fire of Hell is fiercer in heat.) (Qur'an9:81).
It is Muslim girls such as this who
will build Muslim homes and families,
and raise a virtuous generation which
will fill society with constructive and
noble elements. Today there are many
such young women, al-hamdu lillah.
Proper dress for women was not
something novel introduced by Islam; it
existed in all the laws of Allah (SWT)
revealed before Islam. This can be seen
in what remains of those laws in the
altered books (i.e. the Bible). We also
see it in the modest dress of the
Christian nuns who live in the Islamic
world and also in the West, and in the
fact that the women of the people of the
Book cover their heads when they enter
their churches. The modern rejection of
the idea that women should be covered
and modest goes against all divine laws,
from the time of Ibrahim, Musa and `Isa
(PBUH), until the hanifi way
brought by Islam. This attitude is an
attempt to escape the decree of Allah
(SWT), which Allah (SWT) has sent to
mankind throughout the ages, brought
time after time by His Messengers to
guide mankind to truth and
righteousness, so that they would become
one nation, worshipping and obeying one
Lord:
( Mankind was but one nation, but
differed [later]. Had it not been for
a Word that went forth before from
your Lord, their differences would
have been settled between them.) (Qur'an
10:19)
( O messengers! Enjoy [all]
things good and pure, and work
righteousness; for I am
well-acquainted with [all] that you
do. And verily this Brotherhood of
yours is a single Brotherhood. And I
am your Lord and Cherisher: therefore
fear Me [and no other].) (Qur'an
23:51-52)
( And [remember her who guarded
her chastity: We breathed into her of
Our Spirit, and We made her and her
son a Sign for all peoples. Verily,
this Brotherhood of yours is a single
Brotherhood, and I am your Lord and
Cherisher: therefore serve Me [and no
other].) (Qur'an 21:91-92)
The determination of many modern
societies that women should be
uncovered, living naked and immoral
lives, is an indication of how far they
have deviated from the guidance of Allah
(SWT), not only in the Muslim lands, but
in all countries of the world. The
Westerners may not care about this, and
may go ahead and invent more means of
immorality without finding any deterrent
in their corrupted books, but the
Muslims who worship Allah (SWT) by
reciting His perfectly preserved Book
night and day will never accept such
deviance, no matter how negligent and
weak they are in their practice of
Islam, because they constantly hear the
definitive words of the Qur'an and
Sunnah warning those who disobey Allah
(SWT) and His Messenger of the test in
this life and the severe punishment to
come in the Hereafter:
( . . . Let those beware who
withstand the Messenger's order, lest
some trial befall them, or a grievous
Penalty be inflicted on them.) (Qur'an
24:63)
So those men and women who have sold out
to the West and called for women to
uncover themselves and take off hijab,
have failed miserably in the face of the
determination of the men and women of
the Islamic revival which is taking
place throughout the world.
Rightly-guided, educated Muslim women
have gone back to their distinctive
Islamic dress and correct, decent hijab,
in many Muslim countries which had
previously witnessed the call for
Westernization and the abolishing of hijab
and decency. For example, the followers
of Ataturk in Turkey, Reza Pahlevi in
Iran, Muhammad Aman in Afghanistan,
Ahmed Zogo and Enver Hoxha in Albania,
Marcus Fahmi, Qasim Amin and Hoda
Shaarawi in Egypt. Some of those who
supported women's "liberation"
from hijab and modesty have now
renounced their former opinions about
women's showing off and mixing freely
with men.
Dr Nawal al-Saadawi, who for a long
time attacked hijab and those who
wear it, vehemently calling for women to
take off hijab, now condemns the
vulgarity and scandalous nakedness of
women in the West. She says:
"In the streets of London . . .
I see women who are nearly naked,
showing off their bodies like
merchandise. Clothing has a function,
which is to protect the body from the
natural environment, not to transmit
messages of temptation. If a woman saw
herself as a human being, and not as
merchandise, she would not need to show
her nakedness."88
It became clear to Nawal al-Saadawi
after a while, that the veil should be
removed from the mind, not the body,
especially in the case of those men and
women who are educated. Those women of
lesser education, but with intelligence
and openness of mind, who wear hijab,
are worth tens of those foolish educated
women who make a wanton display of
themselves, uncovering their faces,
heads and bodies whilst veiling their
minds and instincts! This is why she
describes her future plans as
"lifting the veil from the minds of
educated men and women."89
She adds: "I know many female
professors, doctors and engineers who
are politically, socially and culturally
illiterate."90
The famous novelist Ihsan `Abd
al-Quddus, who flooded the literary
marketplace with his stories that called
for women to go out of the house and
mingle with men, dancing with them at
parties and night-clubs, said in an
interview with the Kuwaiti newspaper al-Anba'
(18 January 1989):
"I think that the basic
responsibility of any woman is her house
and children. This applies to me above
all. If it were not for my wife, I would
not have been able to enjoy success,
stability and family life, because she
is devoted to the house and children . .
."
In the same interview, he said:
"I never in all my life envisaged
marrying a woman who works, and I am
well-known for this, because I knew from
the beginning that the house is a heavy
burden or responsibility for
women."
She avoids mixing freely with men
The true Muslim woman avoids mixing
with men as much as possible; she does
not pursue it or encourage it. Thus she
follows the example of Fatimah, the
daughter of the Prophet (PBUH), the
Prophet's wives, the women of the salaf
(the Sahabah and Tabi`in),
and those who followed their way
sincerely.
The harm that may be done to both
sexes as a result of free mixing, that
is obvious to the Muslim woman, is now
becoming clear to Westerners who have
practised free mixing on the widest
scale. They have seen that it leads to a
fall in standards of education, so they
have now begun to segregate male and
female students in some universities and
institutes of education. A number of the
greatest Muslim educators, who have
visited Europe, America and Russia have
witnessed this segregation, for example,
Professor Ahmad Mazhar al-`Azmah, who
was sent by the Syrian Ministry of
Education to Belgium, where he visited a
number of schools. On a visit to a
girls' elementary school, he asked the
principal, "Why do you not let boys
and girls mix at this level of
education?" She replied, "We
noticed the harm that mixing can to do
children even at the elementary
level."
There was news that Russia had
reached a similar conclusion, and had
established separate, segregated
branches of universities, where male and
female students did not mix.
In A, there are more than 170
university branches in which male and
female students do not mix. They were
set up because the educators and
supervisors noticed the harm that was
caused by mixing, even in a society that
is used to mixing in every area of
social life.
The evidence of the harm caused by
mixing is too vast to be enumerated. All
of it points to the wisdom of Islam in
putting an end to mixing, and protecting
the Muslim societies which adhere to
Islamic guidance from its destructive,
harmful effects.
She does not shake hands with
a non-mahram man
It is natural that a Muslim woman who
does not mix with men would not wish to
shake hands with anyone who is not her mahram,
in accordance with the teaching and
example of the Prophet (PBUH). Bukhari
reports that `A'ishah (May Allah be
pleased with her) said:
"When the believing women made hijrah
to the Prophet (PBUH), he would
examine and test them, in accordance
with the ayah: ( `O you who
believe! When there come to you
believing women refugees, examine [and
test] them'. . .) (Qur'an 60:10)
Whoever accepted these conditions
required of the believing women has
thereby accepted their bay`ah.
When the Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
accepted their words, he told them (the
women), `You may go now, for I have
accepted your bay`ah.' By Allah
(SWT), the Prophet's hand never touched
the hand of a woman; he accepted their bay`ah
by words only. By Allah (SWT), he never
put any conditions on women other than
those that Allah (SWT) commanded him,
and when he had confirmed the bay`ah
he would say `I have accepted you bay`ah
by your words.'"91
She does not travel except with a mahram
One of the rulings of Islam
concerning women is that a woman should
not travel without a mahram,
because travel is full of dangers and
hardships and it is not right for a
woman to face all this alone, without a mahram
to protect her and take care of her. So
the Prophet (PBUH) forbade women to
travel alone without a mahram;
this is recorded in numerous Hadith, but
it will suffice to quote just two of
them here:
"A woman should not travel for
three days except with a mahram."92
"It is not permitted for a
woman who believes in Allah (SWT) and
the Last Day to travel the
walking-distance of three days without
a mahram."93
All the Hadith on this topic state that
the presence of a mahram is the
condition for women's travel, except in
cases of utter necessity as defined by
the scholars, whose points of view
differ somewhat.94
In this way the Muslim woman is truly
obedient to Allah (SWT), following His
commands, heeding His prohibitions, and
accepting His rulings. She adheres to
the teachings of Islam and bears with
patience any difficulties that may be
involved in obeying Allah (SWT), even if
this goes against many of the prevalent
social ideas. She is filled with hope
that she will ultimately be successful
and victorious, as the Qur'an states:
( By [the Token of] Time [through
the Ages], Verily Man is in loss,
Except such as have Faith, and do
righteous deeds, and [join together]
in the mutual teaching of Truth, and
of Patience and Constancy.) (Qur'an
103:1-3)
She accepts the will and decree of
Allah(SWT)
The Muslim woman who is obedient to
the command of her Lord naturally
accepts His will and decree, because
this is one of the greatest signs of
faith, obedience, taqwa and
righteousness in a person. So the Muslim
woman who is guided by the teachings of
Islam always accepts whatever befalls
her in life, whether it is good or bad,
because this attitude of acceptance is
good for her in all cases, as the
Prophet (PBUH) explained:
"How amazing is the affair of the
Muslim! His affairs are all good. If
he experiences ease, he is grateful,
and that is good for him. If he
experiences hardship, he faces it with
patience and perseverance, and that is
also good for him."95
The Muslim woman is convinced that
whatever befalls her in life could not
have been avoided, and whatever does not
befall her could not have been made to
happen. Everything happens according to
the will and decree of Allah (SWT), so
her affairs are all good. If something
good happens to her, she voices her
praise to Allah (SWT), the Munificent
Bestower, and she becomes one of those
who are grateful, obedient and
successful; if something bad happens to
her, she faces it with patience and
fortitude, so she becomes of those who
are patient, redeemed and victorious.
With this deep faith, the Muslim
woman faces the upheavals and calamities
of life with a calm soul that accepts
the will and decree of Allah (SWT). She
seeks his help with patience and prayer,
and hoping for reward from Him. She
voices her praise to Allah (SWT) for
what He has willed and decreed, as
al-Khansa' did on the day when she heard
the news about her four sons and said:
"Praise be to Allah (SWT) Who has
honoured me by their martyrdom; I hope
that Allah (SWT) will gather me with
them under His Mercy."96
She goes to the places where she usually
prays, and seeks Allah's (SWT) help with
prayer and patience, as Asma' bint
`Umays used to do when disasters and
tragedies stuck one after the other. She
lost her first husband, Ja`far ibn Abi
Talib (RAA), then she was stricken by
the death of her second husband, Abu
Bakr al-Siddiq (RAA), and of her son,
Muhammad ibn Abi Bakr (RAA).
There are many other examples in
history of Muslim woman who had faith,
hoping for reward from Allah (SWT) and
facing difficulties with patience and
fortitude. Allah (SWT) will reward them
greatly:
( Those who patiently persevere
will truly receive a reward without
measure!) (Qur'an 39:10)
She turns to Allah (SWT) in
repentance
The Muslim woman may find herself
becoming neglectful and slipping from
the Straight Path, so she may fall short
in her practice of Islam in a way that
does not befit the believing woman. But
she will soon notice her error, seek
forgiveness for her mistakes or
shortcomings, and return to the
protection of Allah (SWT):
( Those who fear Allah, when a
thought of evil from Satan assaults
them, Bring Allah to remembrance When
lo! They see [aright]!) (Qur'an
7:201)
The heart that is filled with love and
fear of Allah (SWT) will not be overcome
by negligence. It is those who ignore
Allah's (SWT) commands and guidance who
will be led astray. The heart of the
sincere Muslim woman is ever eager to
repent and seek forgiveness, and
rejoices in obedience, guidance and the
pleasure of Allah (SWT).
She feels a sense of
responsibility for
the members of her family
The responsibility of the Muslim
woman for the members of her family is
no less, in the sight of Allah (SWT),
than that of the man. Her responsibility
is in fact even greater than a man's,
because of what she knows of the secret
life of her children who live with her
most of the time: they may tell her
things that they do not tell their
father. The Muslim woman feels this
responsibility every time she hears the
words of the Prophet (PBUH):
"Each of you is a shepherd and
each of you is responsible for his
flock. The leader is a shepherd and is
responsible for his flock; a man is
the shepherd of his family and is
responsible for his flock; a woman is
the shepherd in the house of her
husband and is responsible for her
flock; the servant is the shepherd of
his master's wealth and is responsible
for it. Each of you is a shepherd and
is responsible for his flock."97
This sense of responsibility constantly
motivates her to put right any faults or
shortcomings she finds in her family's
behaviour. A woman does not keep quiet
about any deviance, weakness or
negligence in her family or home, unless
she is lacking in religion, her
character is weak, and her understanding
is incomplete.
Her main concern is the pleasure
of Allah (SWT)
The true Muslim woman always seeks to
earn the pleasure of Allah (SWT) in
everything she does. So she measures
everything against this precise
standard, and will retain or discard any
practice accordingly.
Whenever there is a conflict between
what pleases Allah (SWT), and what
pleases other people, she chooses what
pleases Allah (SWT), with no hesitation
or argument, even if it will angeother
people. She does this because she knows,
with her deep understanding of Islam and
her own common sense, that pleasing the
people is a goal that can never be
achieved, and it will only bring about
the wrath of Allah (SWT). The Prophet
(PBUH) said:
"Whoever seeks the pleasure of
Allah (SWT) at the risk of displeasing
the people, Allah (SWT) will take care
of him and protect him from them. But
whoever seeks the pleasure of the
people at the risk of displeasing
Allah (SWT), Allah (SWT) will abandon
him to the care of the people."98
By weighing up her deeds in this precise
fashion, the Straight Path will be
clearly signposted for the Muslim woman.
She will know what she is allowed to do
and what she should avoid; her unfailing
standard is the pleasure of Allah (SWT).
Thus the life of the Muslim women will
be free from ridiculous contradiction
which have ensnared so many of those who
have deviated from the guidance of Allah
(SWT).
There are women whom one sees praying
perfectly, but in many instances they
follow their own desires and deviate
from the right path. In social
gatherings they involve themselves in
gossip and backbiting, criticising
people, plotting against anybody they
dislike, and putting words in their
mouths so as to discredit them. These
people are suffering from weakness of
faith and a failure to understand the
true reality of this holistic religion
which Allah (SWT) revealed to guide
mankind in all aspects of life, both
public and private, so that people might
seek the pleasure of Allah (SWT) by
obeying His commands and emulating the
behaviour of the Prophet (PBUH).
There are also women who obey Allah
(SWT) in some matters, but disobey Him
in others, acting according to their own
whims and desires. Such people are, as
it were, half-Muslims, and the split
personality of those who have deviated
from the guidance of Islam is one of the
most dangerous psychological and
spiritual disorders facing modern man.
She understands the true meaning
of
being a servant of Allah(SWT)
The true Muslim woman has the firm
belief that she has been created to
serve an important purpose in life,
which Allah (SWT) has defined in the
Qur'an:
( I have only created jinns
and men, that they may serve Me.) (Qur'an
51:56)
Life, for the true Muslim woman, is not
to be spent solely on daily chores or
enjoyment of the good things of this
world; life is an important mission, in
which every believer must take on the
responsibility of living in such a way
that he or she will be a true and
sincere worshipper of Allah (SWT). This
can only be achieved by checking one's
intention, in all one's deeds, to ensure
that they are done for the sake of Allah
(SWT) and to please Him. According to
Islam, all deeds are tied to the
intentions behind them, as the Prophet
(PBUH) said:
"Actions are but by intention,
and every man shall have but that
which he intended. Thus he whose
migration was for Allah (SWT) and His
Messenger, his migration was for Allah
(SWT) and His Messenger; and he whose
migration was to achieve some worldly
benefit or to take some woman in
marriage, his migration was for that
which he intended."99
Hence the Muslim woman may be in a
continuous state of worship, which may
encompass all of her deeds, so long as
she checks her intentions and ensures
that she is carrying out her mission in
life, as Allah (SWT) wants her to do. So
she may be in a state of worship when
she treats her parents with kindness and
respect, when she is a good wife to her
husband, when she takes care of her
children's upbringing and education,
when she goes about her domestic chores,
when she upholds the ties of kinship,
etc., so long as she does all this in
obedience to the commands of Allah
(SWT), and with the intention of serving
and worshipping Him.
She works to support the religion
of Allah(SWT)
The most important act of worship
that the Muslim woman can do is to
strive to establish the rule of Allah
(SWT) on earth, and to follow the way of
life that He has prescribed, so that
Islam will govern the life of the
individual, the family, the community
and the nation.
The sincere Muslim woman will feel
that her worship is lacking if she does
not strive to achieve the purpose for
which Allah (SWT) created jinn
and men, namely promoting the supremacy
of the authority of Allah (SWT) on
earth, which is the only way in which
mankind can truly worship Allah (SWT):
( I have only created jinns
and men, that they may worship Me.) (Qur'an
51:56)
This is the only way in which the true
meaning of the words "la ilaha
ill-Allah" will be realized in
our own lives.
The first Muslim women had a sound
grasp of this meaning, which penetrated
deep into their souls. They were no less
enthusiastic than the men when it came
to sacrifice and courage for the sake of
Allah (SWT). Some of the women of the
early generations of this ummah
excelled many of the men in this regard.
Asma' bint `Umays, the wife of Ja`far
ibn Abi Talib, hastened to embrace Islam
along with her husband in the earliest
days of Islam, the days of hardship and
suffering. She migrated with him to
Abyssinia, in spite of the risks and
hardships involved, for the sake of
Allah (SWT) and to support His religion.
When `Umar ibn al-Khattab joked with her
and said, "O Habashiyyah
(Abyssinian woman)!
We beat you to Madinah," she
said, "You have most certainly
spoken the truth. You were with the
Messenger of Allah, feeding the hungry
and teaching the ignorant, whilst we
were far away in exile. By Allah (SWT),
I shall go to the Messenger of Allah and
tell him that." She came to the
Prophet (PBUH) and said, "O
Messenger of Allah, some men are
criticizing us and claiming that we were
not among the early muhajirin."
The Messenger of Allah (PBUH) said,
"But you have two hijrahs;
you migrated to the land of Abyssinia,
whilst we were detained in Makkah, then
you migrated to me afterwards."100
Asma' bint `Umays was successful in
establishing the virtue of those who had
migrated to Abyssinia in the early days
of Islam, and she understood from the
Prophet (PBUH) that this distinguished
group would have the reward of two hijrahs.
This was a great honour which was theirs
because they had not hesitated to
support the Prophet (PBUH), even though
it meant leaving behind their families
and homeland for the sake of Allah
(SWT).
Muslim women were also present at the
Treaty of `Aqabah, which took place in
secret, under cover of darkness, and
which played such an important role in
supporting the Prophet (PBUH). Among the
delegation of Ansar were two women of
status and virtue: Nasibah bint Ka`b
al-Maziniyyah, and Umm Mani` Asma' bint
`Amr al-Sulamiyyah, the mother of Mu`adh
ibn Jabal (RAA); the latter was present
with the Prophet (PBUH) at Khaybar,
where she performed extremely well.
When the Prophet (PBUH) began his
Mission, calling for pure Tawhid
and the abandonment of idol-worship, the
mushrikin were very angry with
him, and plotted to break into his house
at night and kill him. The conspirators
kept quiet and vowed to let their plot
to kill the Prophet remain a secret
amongst themselves. Nobody even sensed
that there was a plot, apart from one
Muslim woman, who was over one hundred
years old. Her name was Ruqayqah bint
Sayfi, and she did not let the weakness
of old age stop her from hastening to
save the Prophet's life. She made her
way to him, and told him what the people
were planning to do. He embarked upon
his hijrah straight away, leaving
the land that was the most beloved to
him on earth, and leaving his cousin
`Ali (RAA) sleeping in his bed, so that
the conspirators surrounding his house
would think that he was there, and this
would keep them from following him and
killing him on the road.101
What a tremendous service this great
woman did for Islam and the Muslims! How
great was her jihad to save the
life of the Messenger of Allah (PBUH) at
the most dangerous time he ever faced.
When the Prophet (PBUH) and his
companion left Makkah, and stayed out of
sight in the cave of Hira' at the top of
Mount Thawr, it was a young girl who
brought them food and water, and news of
the people who were lying in wait for .
Her name was Asma' bint Abi Bakr
al-Siddiq (May Allah be pleased with
her).
This brave young girl used to cover
the great distance between Makkah and
Mount Thawr at night; the difficulty and
isolation of this journey, and the
presence of watchful enemies, did not
deter her. She knew that by saving the
life of the Prophet (PBUH) and his
companion, helping them to reach their
goal of going to Madinah, she was
supporting the religion of Allah (SWT),
and working towards making His word
supreme on earth. So she undertook her
difficult mission every day, ever alert
and striving to conceal herself as she
walked and climbed up the mountain,
until she had brought whatever supplies
and news she was carrying to the Prophet
(PBUH) and his companion. Then she would
go back down to Makkah under cover of
darkness.102
This mission, which even the
strongest of men could have failed to
achieve, is not all that Asma' did to
support the Prophet (PBUH) and Islam.
She was tested severely, and proved to
be as solid as a rock, on the day when
the mushrikin surrounded her and
asked about her father. She denied
knowing anything, and they placed severe
pressure on her, so much so that Abu
Jahl struck her a blow that sent her
earring flying from her ear. But this
did not weaken her resolve or her
determination to keep her secret hidden.
She kept up her mission of taking food
and news to the Prophet (PBUH) and his
companion, until the time came for them
to leave the cave and head for Madinah.
She had already brought them provisions
for the journey, but when she checked
the cloth in which they were wrapped,
she found that she had nothing with
which to tie it apart from her own
girdle. She told her father, who told
her to tear it in two and use one piece
to tie the water skins and the other to
tie the cloth holding the food. Hence
Asma' became known as Dhat
al-Nitaqayn (she of the two
girdles).103
It was the attitude of the early
Muslim women to support the religion of
Allah (SWT) and join the forces of da`wah,
because their hearts were filled with
strong, vibrant faith. They could not
bear to stay in the land of kufr,
far from the centre of Islam, so they
migrated - with their husbands, if they
were married - and their hijrah,
like that of the men, was in obedience
to Allah (SWT) and in support of His
religion. Their faith was like that of
the men, and they made sacrifices just
as the men did.
This deep faith is what motivated Umm
Kalthum bint `Uqbah ibn Abi Mu`ayt to
migrate to Madinah alone, at the time of
the Treaty of al-Hudaybiyah, where the
Prophet (PBUH) had promised to return to
the mushrikin anyone who came to
him to embrace Islam. The Prophet (PBUH)
had already kept his promise and sent
two men back. When Umm Kalthum reached
Madinah, she said to the Prophet (PBUH):
"I have fled to you with my
religion, so protect me and do not send
me back to them, for they will punish me
and torture me, and I do not have the
patience and fortitude to endure that. I
am a mere woman, and you know the
weakness of women. I see that you have
already sent two men back." The
Prophet (PBUH) said: "Allah (SWT)
has cancelled this treaty with regard to
women."104
Allah (SWT) knew the faith of Umm
Kalthum bint `Uqbah ibn Abi Mu`ayt, and
other muhajir women who had
migrated solely out of love for Allah
(SWT) and His Messenger and Islam.
He revealed Qur'an concerning them,
abolishing the treaty between the
Prophet and the mushrikin in the
case of women only, and forbidding their
being sent back to the mushrikin
once the Prophet (PBUH) had tested them
and ensured that they had not migrated
for the sake of a husband or wealth or
some other worldly purpose, and that
they had indeed migrated for the sake of
Allah (SWT) and His Messenger:
( O you who believe! When there
come to you believing women refugees,
examine [and test] them: Allah knows
best as to their Faith: if you
ascertain that they are Believers,
then send them not back to the
Unbelievers. They are not lawful
[wives] for the Unbelievers, nor are
the [Unbelievers] lawful [husbands]
for them. .) (Qur'an 60:10)
One of those virtuous women who were
among the first people to support Islam
and the Prophet was Umm al-Fadl bint
al-Harith, Lubabah, the full-sister of
the Prophet's wife Maymunah. She was the
second woman to embrace Islam: she
became Muslim after Khadijah (May Allah
be pleased with her). She was a source
of great support and consolation for the
Prophet (PBUH).
Lubabah was the wife of the Prophet's
paternal uncle al-`Abbas ibn `Abd
al-Muttalib, and was diametrically
opposed to Umm Jamil bint Harb, the wife
of his other paternal uncle Abu Lahab,
whom the Qur'an described as the carrier
of firewood who would have a twisted
rope of palm-leaf fibre around her neck
(see Qur'an 111:4-5), because of her
determination to harm the Prophet
(PBUH), whilst Lubabah was the first to
come to his support and to make
sacrifices to support his religion
during the most testing days that the
early Muslims faced.
Lubabah, her husband al-`Abbas and
their sons used to conceal their Islam,
in obedience to the Prophet's command
and in accordance with a
well-thought-out plan.
Thus they were able to learn the
secrets of the mushrikin and pass
them on to the Messenger of Allah
(PBUH). When the battle of Badr was
waged between the Muslims and the mushrikin,
and news came of the defeat of Quraysh,
Umm Fadl urged her sons and her freed
slave Abu Rafi` to conceal their joy at
this defeat, because she feared that the
mushrikin, especially Abu Lahab
who was filled with hatred towards
Muhammad (PBUH), his companions and his
message, might do them some harm.
But her freed slave Abu Rafi` was not
safe from the wrath of Abu Lahab; when
he expressed his joy at the Muslims'
victory, Abu Lahab was enraged and
vented his fury on the poor man, beating
him in the presence of Umm Fadl. At this
point, Umm Fadl became like a fierce
lioness, and attacked him shouting,
"You pick on him when his master is
absent!" She struck him with one of
the (wooden) pillars of the house and
dealt him a fatal blow to the head. Abu
Lahab did not live more than seven days
after that.
Umm Fadl bore her separation from her
husband al-`Abbas with patience, for the
sake of Allah (SWT) and in support of
His religion, when the Prophet (PBUH)
issued a command that al-`Abbas should
stay in Makkah, and she should migrate
to Madinah. Their separation was a
lengthy and difficult one, but Umm Fadl
bore it patiently, hoping for reward and
seeking help from Allah (SWT) through
prayer and fasting, waiting for her
beloved husband to finish what he had to
do in Makkah and come to Madinah. As it
turned out, he was one of the last to
migrate to Madinah. The only thing that
helped to ease the pain of this
separation was seeing her eldest son
`Abdullah, accompanying the Prophet
(PBUH) daily and drinking deeply from
the pure wellspring of Islam. It never
occurred to her that history was
preparing her to enter its widest gate,
for she was to be the great mother of
the great authority on Islamic teaching
and the interpretation of the Qur'an:
`Abdullah ibn al-`Abbas (RAA).
Another one of the early Muslim women
who thought little of the sufferings and
torture they endured for the sake of
Islam was Sumayyah, the mother of `Ammar
ibn Yasir. When the mid-day heat was at
its most intense, and the desert sands
were boiling, Banu Makhzum would drag
her and her son and husband out to an
exposed area, where they would pour
burning sand over them, place heated
shields on them, and throw heavy rocks
at them, until her son and husband
sought to protect themselves from this
appalling torture by saying some words
to agree with the mushrikin,
although they hated to do so. Concerning
them and others in similar situations,
Allah (SWT) revealed the ayah: ( Anyone
who, after accepting faith in Allah,
utters Unbelief, except under
compulsion, his heart remaining firm in
faith . . .) (Qur'an 16:106)
But Sumayyah remained steadfast and
patient, and refused to say what the mushrikin
wanted to hear. The despicable Abu Jahl
stabbed her with a spear, killing her,
and thus she had the honour ofbeing
recorded as the first martyr in Islam.
The history of Islam is filled with
other women who endured even worse
torture for the sake of Islam. This
suffering did not weaken their resolve
or exhaust their patience; rather they
willingly accepted whatever befell them,
hoping for reward from Allah (SWT). They
never said anything that would undermine
their religion, and they never
humiliated themselves by begging for
mercy. Historians record that many of
the men who were oppressed - apart from
Bilal, may Allah (SWT) have mercy on him
- were forced to say something that
would please their oppressors, in order
to save their lives, but not one of the
women who were similarly oppressed was
reported to have given in.
These brilliant Muslim women welcomed
the oppression they suffered for the
sake of Allah (SWT) and making His word
supreme on earth. They never stopped
preaching the word of Islam, no matter
what trials and suffering came their
way.
In the story of Umm Sharik
al-Qurashiyyah al-`Amiriyyah, Ibn `Abbas
gives an eye-witness account of the
depth of the women's faith and how they
rushed to devote themselves to Allah's
(SWT) cause, patiently enduring whatever
trials this entailed.
Ibn `Abbas said:
"Umm Sharik began to think about
Islam whilst she was in Makkah. She
embraced Islam, then began to mix with
the women of Quraysh in secret, calling
them to Islam, until this became known
to the people of Makkah. They seized her
and said, `If it were not for your
people, we would have done what we
wanted to you, but we will send you back
to them.' She said, `So they seated me
on a camel with no saddle or cushion
beneath me, and left me for three days
without giving me anything to eat or
drink. After three days I began to lose
consciousness. Whenever they stopped,
they would leave me out in the sun
whilst they sought shade, and keep food
and drink away from me until they
resumed their journey . . .'"
This was not all that Muslim women
did in support of Islam; they also went
out on military expeditions with the
Prophet (PBUH) and his Companions where,
when the forces of iman and the
forces of kufr met in armed
combat, they performed the important
duty of preparing the waterskins and
bringing water to the fighters, and
tending the wounded, and carrying the
dead away from the battlefield.
At the most critical moments, they
never shrank from taking up weapons and
entering the fray alongside the Prophet
(PBUH) and his Companions.
Bukhari and Muslim narrate many
Hadith which illustrate the brilliance
of the Muslim women during that golden
age, when hearts were filled with
vibrant faith, deep love for Allah (SWT)
and His Messenger, and the desire to
make Islam victorious.
One of these reports is the account
given by Imam Muslim of Umm `Atiyyah
al-Ansariyyah, who said:
"I went out on seven military
campaigns with the Messenger of Allah
(PBUH). I stayed behind in the camp,
making food for them and tending to
the sick and wounded."105
Anas ibn Malik said:
"The Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
used to go out on military campaigns
accompanied by Umm Sulaym and some of
the Ansar women; they would
bring water and tend the
wounded."106
Imam Bukhari reported that al-Rubayyi`
bint Mu`awwidh said:
"We were with the Prophet (PBUH),
bringing water, tending the wounded,
and bringing the dead back to
Madinah."107
Bukhari and Muslim report that Anas
said:
"On the day of Uhud, when some of
the people ran away from the Prophet
(PBUH), Abu Talhah stood before the
Prophet (PBUH), defending him with a
shield. Abu Talhah was a
highly-skilled archer, and on that day
he broke two or three bows. Whenever a
man passed by who had a quiver full of
arrows, he would say, `Give it to Abu
Talhah.' Whenever the Prophet of Allah
(PBUH) raised his head to see what was
happening, Abu Talhah told him, `O
Prophet of Allah, may my father and
mother be sacrificed for you! Do not
raise your head, lest an arrow strike
you. May it hit my chest rather than
yours.' He [Anas] said: I saw `A'ishah
bint Abi Bakr and Umm Sulaym, both of
whom had tucked up their garments so
that their anklets were visible. They
were carrying waterskins on their
backs and were pouring water into the
mouths of the people. They would go
back and fill the waterskins again,
then come and pour water into the
mouths of the people again. Abu
Talhah's sword fell from his hands two
or three times because of
exhaustion."108
What a noble deed these two great women
did in quenching the thirst of the mujahidin
in the midst of a raging battle and in
the intense heat of the Hijaz climate.
They were moving about the battlefield,
not caring about the falling arrows and
clashing swords that surrounded them.
For this reason, the Rightly-Guided khalifah
`Umar ibn al-Khattab (RAA) preferred Umm
Salit over his own wife Umm Kalthum bint
`Ali when he was sharing out some
garments among the women of Madinah.
Because she had sewn waterskins on the
day of Uhud, and this had played an
important role in helping the mujahidin
and renewing their energy. Bukhari
reports from Tha`labah ibn Abi Malik:
"Umar ibn al-Khattab shared out
some garments among the women of
Madinah. There was one good garment
left, and some of the people with him
said, `O Amir al-Mu'minin, give
this to your wife, the grand-daughter
of the Messenger of Allah,' meaning
Umm Kalthum bint `Ali. `Umar said,
`Umm Salit has more right to it.' Umm
Salit was one of the Ansari
women who had pledged their allegiance
to the Prophet (PBUH). `Umar said,
`She carried the water-skins to us on
the day of Uhud.'"109
At Uhud, the Prophet's cheek and
upper lip were wounded and his tooth
was broken. His daughter Fatimah (May
Allah be pleased with her) washed his
wounds, whilst `Ali poured the water.
When Fatimah saw that the water only
made the bleeding worse, she took a
piece of matting, burned it, and
applied it to the wound to stop the
bleeding.110
Among the women who stood firm at the
most intense moments of the battle of
Uhud was Safiyyah bint `Abd al-Muttalib,
the (paternal) aunt of the Prophet
(PBUH). She stood with a spear in her
hand, striking the faces of the people
and saying, "Are you running away
from the Messenger of Allah?!" When
the Prophet (PBUH) saw her, he gestured
to her son al-Zubayr ibn al-`Awwam that
he should bring her back so that she
would not see what had happened to her
brother Hamzah (RAA). She said,
"Why? I have heard that my brother
has been mutilated, but that is nothing
for the sake of Allah (SWT). We accept
what has happened, and I shall hope for
reward and be patient, in sha Allah."
Safiyyah was also present at the
battle of al-Khandaq (the trench). When
the Prophet (PBUH) set out from Madinah
to fight his enemies, he put his wives
and womenfolk in the fortress of the
poet Hassan ibn Thabit, which was the
most secure fortress in Madinah. A
Jewish man came by, and began to walk
around the fortress. Safiyyah said,
"O Hassan, this Jew is walking
around the fortress, and by Allah (SWT)
I fear that he will go and tell the
other Jews out there where we are. The
Messenger of Allah (PBUH) and his
Companions are too busy to come and help
us, so go down and kill him."
Hassan said, "May Allah forgive
you, O daughter of `Abd al-Muttalib. By
Allah (SWT), you know that I am not like
that." When Safiyyah heard this,
she stood up, took hold of a wooden
post, and went down from the fortress
herself. She struck the Jew with the
wooden post and killed him, then went
back to the fortress and said, "O
Hassan, go down and strip him of his
arms and armour; the only thing that is
preventing me from doing so is that he
is a man." Hassan said, "I
have no need of this booty, O daughter
of Abd al-Muttalib." Safiyyah was
also present at the battle of Khaybar.
One of the most distinguished women
who took part in the battle of Uhud, if
not the most distinguished of them, was
Nasibah bint Ka`ab al-Maziniyyah, Umm
`Umarah (May Allah be pleased with her).
At the beginning of the battle, she was
bringing water and tending the wounded,
as the other women were doing. When the
battle was going in the favour of the
Muslims, the archers disobeyed command
of the Prophet (PBUH), and this turned
the victory into defeat, as the Qur'an
described it:
( Behold! You were climbing up the
high ground, without even casting a
side glance at anyone, and the
Messenger in your rear was calling you
back . . .) (Qur'an 3:153)
At this point, Nasibah went forward,
with her sword unsheathed and her bow in
her hand, to join the small group who
were standing firm with the Prophet
(PBUH), acting as a human shield to
protect him from the arrows of the mushrikin.
Every time danger approached the Prophet
(PBUH), she hastened to protect him. The
Messenger of Allah (PBUH) noticed this,
and later said, "Wherever I turned,
to the left or the right, I saw her
fighting for me."
Her son `Umarah also described what
happened on that tremendous day:
"On that day, I was wounded in my
left hand. A man who seemed to be as
tall as a palm-tree struck me, then went
away without pursuing me to finish me
off. The blood began to flow copiously,
so the Messenger of Allah (PBUH) told
me, `Bind up your wound.' My mother came
to me, and she was wearing a
waist-wrapper, which she had brought,
for the purpose of wrapping wounds. She
dressed my wound, whilst the Prophet
(PBUH) was looking on. Then she told me,
`Get up, my son, and fight the people.'
The Prophet (PBUH) said, `Who could bear
what you are putting up with, O Umm
`Umarah?' She said: The man who had
struck my son came by, and the Messenger
of Allah said, `This is the one who
struck your son.' I intercepted him and
hit him in the thigh, and he collapsed.
I saw the Messenger of Allah smiling so
broadly that I could see his back teeth.
He said, `You have taken your revenge, O
Umm `Umarah!' Then we struck him with
our weapons until we killed him, and the
Prophet (PBUH) said: `Praise be to Allah
(SWT), who granted you victory over him,
gave you the satisfaction of taking
revenge on your enemy, and let you see
the vengeance for yourself."
On this day, Nasibah herself received
many wounds whilst she was fighting the
people and striking their chests. The
Prophet (PBUH) saw her, and called to
her son, "Your mother! Your mother!
See to her wounds, may Allah (SWT) bless
you and your household! Your mother has
fought better than so-and-so." When
his mother heard what the Prophet (PBUH)
said, she said, "Pray to Allah
(SWT) that we may accompany you in
Paradise." He said, "O Allah
(SWT), make them my companions in
Paradise." She said, "I do not
care what befalls me in this
world."111
Umm `Umarah's jihad was not
confined to the battle of Uhud. She was
also present on a number of other
occasions, namely the treaty of `Aqabah,
al-Hudaybiyah, Khaybar and Hunayn. Her
heroic conduct at Hunayn was no less
marvellous than her heroic conduct at
Uhud. At the time of Abu Bakr's khilafah,
she was present at al-Yamamah where she
fought brilliantly and received eleven
wounds as well as losing her hand.
It is no surprise that the Prophet
(PBUH) gave her the good news that she
would enter Paradise, and that she was
later held in high esteem by the khalifah
Abu Bakr al-Siddiq (RAA) and his
commander Khalid ibn al-Walid (RAA), and
subsequently by `Umar ibn al-Khattab
(RAA).112
During this golden age of the Muslim
woman's history there was another woman
who was no less great than Nasibah bint
Ka`b: Umm Sulaym bint Milhan. Like Umm
`Umarah, `A'ishah, Fatimah and the other
women, she also brought water and tended
the wounded, but here we will tell
another story. When the Muslims were
preparing to go out with the Prophet
(PBUH) to conquer Makkah, her husband
Abu Talhah was among them. Umm Sulaym
was in the later stages of pregnancy,
but this did not stop her from wanting
to accompany her husband Abu Talhah and
to earn alongside him the reward for jihad
for the sake of Allah (SWT). She did not
care about the hardships and
difficulties that lay ahead on the
journey. Her husband felt sorry for her
and did not want to expose her to all
that, but he had no choice but to ask
the Prophet's permission. The Prophet
(PBUH) gave his permission, and Umm
Sulaym was delighted to accompany her
beloved husband and witness the conquest
of Makkah with him, on that great day
when the hills of Makkah echoed with the
cries of the believers and mujahidin:
"There is no god but Allah (SWT)
alone. He has kept His promise, granted
victory to His servant, and alone has
defeated the confederates. There is
nothing before Him or after Him. There
is no god but Allah (SWT), and we
worship Him alone, adhering faithfully
to His religion although the
disbelievers may hate this." This
was the day when the bastions of
idolatry and shirk in the Arabian
Peninsula were forever destroyed, and
the idols were thrown down by the
Prophet (PBUH), as he declared,
( Truth has [now] arrived, and
Falsehood perished: for Falsehood is
[by its nature] bound to perish.)
(Qur'an 17:81)
These events filled Umm Sulaym's soul
with faith, and increased her courage
and her desire to strive for the sake of
Allah (SWT). Only a few days later came
the battle of Hunayn, which was such a
severe test for the Muslims. Some of the
people ran away from the battle, not
caring about anything. The Prophet
(PBUH) stood to the right and said,
"Where are you going, O people?
Come to me! I am the Messenger of Allah,
I am Muhammad ibn Abdullah." Nobody
stayed with him except for a group of Muhajirin
and Ansar, and members of his
household, and Umm Sulaym and her
husband Abu Talhah were among this
group. The Messenger of Allah (PBUH) saw
Umm Sulaym wrapping a garment around her
waist; she was pregnant with `Abdullah
ibn Abi Talhah, and she was trying to
control Abu Talhah's camel, which she
was afraid would get away from her, so
she pulled its head down towards her and
took hold of its nose-ring. The
Messenger of Allah (PBUH) called her,
"O Umm Sulaym!" and she
replied, "Yes, may my father and
mother be sacrificed for you, O
Messenger of Allah."
A report in Sahih Muslim
states:
"On the day of Hunayn, Umm Sulaym
took hold of a dagger and kept it with
her. Abu Talhah saw her, and said, `O
Messenger of Allah, Umm Sulaym has a
dagger.' The Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
asked her, `What is this dagger?' She
said, `I took it so that if any one of
the mushrikin comes near me, I
will rip his belly open with it.' The
Messenger of Allah (PBUH) began to
laugh. She said, `O Messenger of
Allah, kill all of the tulaqa113
who have run away and left you.' The
Messenger of Allah (PBUH) said, `Allah
(SWT) is sufficient for us and He has
taken care of us.'"114
Umm Sulaym stood firm with the
Prophet (PBUH) when the battle
intensified and even the bravest of
men were put to the test. She could
not bear even to see those who had run
away and left the Prophet (PBUH), so
she told him, "Kill those who ran
away and left you . . ." It comes
as no surprise that the Messenger of
Allah (PBUH) gave her the glad tidings
that she would enter Paradise. In a hadith
reported by Bukhari, Muslim and others
from Jabir ibn `Abdullah (RAA), he
(PBUH) told her: "I saw myself in
Paradise, and suddenly I saw
al-Rumaysa'115 bint Milhan,
the wife of Abu Talhah . . ."116
The Messenger of Allah (PBUH) used to
visit Umm Sulaym, and her sister Umm
Haram bint Milhan. Just as he gave glad
tidings to Umm Sulaym that she would
enter Paradise, so he also gave good
news to Umm Haram that she would ride
the waves of the sea with those who went
out to fight for the sake of Allah
(SWT).
Bukhari reports that Anas ibn Malik
(RAA) said:
"The Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
visited the daughter of Milhan, and
rested there for a while. Then he
smiled, and she asked him, `Why are
you smiling, O Messenger of Allah?' He
said, `Some people of my ummah
will cross the green sea for the sake
of Allah (SWT), and they will look
like kings on thrones.' She said, `O
Messenger of Allah, pray to Allah
(SWT) that I will be one of them.' He
said, `O Allah (SWT), make her one of
them.' Then he smiled again, and she
asked him again why he was smiling. He
gave a similar answer, and she said,
`Pray to Allah (SWT) that I will be
one of them.' He said, `You will be
one of the first ones, not one ofthe
last ones.'"
The Prophet's words came true, as
Anas (RAA) reported: "She married
`Ubadah ibn al-Samit, and went out for
jihad with him, and she
travelled across the sea with the
daughter of Qarazah.117
When she came back, her riding-beast
threw her, and she fell and
died."118
Her grave in Cyprus remains to this day
as a memorial to a Muslim woman who
fought in jihad for the sake of
Allah (SWT). When people visit the grave
they say, "This is the grave of a
righteous woman, may Allah (SWT) have
mercy on her."119
Another of the women who took part in
military campaigns and jihad with
the Prophet (PBUH), helping to defend
Islam, was Umm Ayman, the nurse of the
Prophet (PBUH). She was present at Uhud,
Khaybar, Mu'tah and Hunayn, where she
worked hard, tending the wounded and
bringing water to the thirsty.120
There was also Kabshah bint Rafi`
al-Ansariyyah, the mother of Sa`d ibn
Mu`adh (RAA). During the campaign of
Uhud, she came running towards the
Prophet (PBUH), who was on his horse,
and Sa`d ibn Mu`adh (RAA) was holding
onto its reins. Sa`d said, "O
Messenger of Allah, this is my
mother." The Messenger of Allah
(PBUH) said, "She is most
welcome." He stopped for her, and
she came closer; he offered his
condolences for the death of her son
`Amr ibn Mu`adh, told her and her family
the glad tidings of the martyrs in
Paradise, and prayed for them.121
Among these great women are
al-Furay`ah bint Malik, and Umm Hisham
bint Harithah ibn al-Nu`man (RAA). They
were among those who gave their oath of
allegiance to the Prophet (PBUH) under
the tree at Hudaybiyah. This was Bay`at
al-Ridwan, which the Prophet (PBUH)
called for when the mushrikin
prevented the believers from entering
Makkah; the Prophet (PBUH) had sent
`Uthman ibn `Affan to Quraysh, and they
detained him for so long that the
Muslims though Quraysh had betrayed
their trust and killed him. Allah (SWT)
honoured His Messenger and those who
were present on this blessed occasion,
and He bestowed upon them His pleasure
which many die before they can attain
it, and beside which all other hopes and
aspirations pale into insignificance.
Allah (SWT) revealed ayat of the
Qur'an on this occasion, which will be
recited until heaven and earth pass
away:
( Allah's Good Pleasure was on the
Believers when they swore Fealty to
you under the Tree: He knew what was
in their hearts, and He sent down
Tranquillity to them; and He rewarded
them with speedy Victory.) (Qur'an
48:18)
Umm al-Mundhir Salma bint Qays was
present at Bay`at al-Ridwan, and
had previously been present at Bay`ah
al-Mu'minat, hence she was known as Mubaya`at
al-Bay`atayn (the one who gave two
oaths of allegiance). When the Prophet
(PBUH) and his Companions went out to
besiege Banu Qurayzah, this great Sahabiyyah
went with them, and earned the reward
for jihad for the sake of Allah
(SWT).
Asma' bint Yazid ibn al-Sakan
al-Ansariyyah took part in the battle of
al-Khandaq with the Prophet (PBUH). She
was also present at al-Hudaybiyah and Bay`at
al-Ridwan and at the battle of
Khaybar. She continued her worthy
efforts for the sake of Islam until the
Prophet's death, and he died pleased
with her. After his death, she never
stopped working in support of Islam. In
13 AH, she travelled to Syria and was
present at the battle of Yarmuk, when
she brought water to the thirsty, tended
the wounded and encouraged the fighters
to stand firm. Yarmuk is one of the most
famous battles in which the Muslim women
took part alongside the fighting men.
The Muslim army was sorely tested, and
some of them retreated. The mujahid
women were fighting a rear-guard action,
rushing towards those who were running
away with pieces of wood and stones,
urging them to go back and stand firm.
Ibn Kathir noted the courage of the
Muslim women and the important role they
played in this battle:
"The Muslim women fought on this
day, and killed a large number of
Romans. They struck whoever among the
Muslims ran away, and said, `Where are
you going, to leave us at the mercy of
these infidels?!' When they told them
off in this manner, they had not choice
but to return to the fight."122
The Muslim woman's stance and
encouragement played a major role in
making the mujahidin stand firm
until Allah (SWT) decreed that they
would be victorious over the Romans.
On this tremendous day, Asma' bint
Yazid did extremely well, and
demonstrated a type of courage that was
unknown among many of the men. She went
forth into the battle lines, and struck
down a number of the mushrikin.
Ibn Hijr also noted her bravery:
"Umm Salamah al-Ansariyyah,
i.e., Asma' bint Yazid ibn Sakan, was
present at al-Yarmuk. On that day she
killed nine Romans with her tent-pole.
She lived for a while after that."123
It seems that this great heroine
spent the rest of her life in Syria,
where the battle of Yarmuk took place,
as she went with those of the Sahabah
who went there. She lived until the time
of Yazid ibn Mu`awiyah, and when she
passed away, she was buried in the
cemetery of al-Bab al-Saghir. Her grave
is still there, bearing proud testimony
to the jihad of Muslim women for
the sake of Allah (SWT).124
These golden pages of Muslim women's
history were written by those virtuous
women themselves, through the depth of
their faith and the completeness of
their understanding of the Muslim's
woman's mission in life and her duty
towards her Lord and her religion. What
I have cited represents only a small
part of a vast and noble record of rare
sacrifice, proud determination, unique
talents and deep faith. Undoubtedly
Muslim women today may find in these
accounts an example worthy of following
as they seek to form their own modern
Islamic character and identity.
She is distinguished by her
Islamic character
and true religion
No doubt the true Muslim woman is
distinguished by her Islamic character,
and she is proud of the high status
which Islam gave her at a very early
stage, before women in other nations
attained anything like it. Fifteen
centuries ago, Islam proclaimed the full
rights of women for the first time in
history, and Muslim women enjoyed human
rights centuries before the world had
ever heard of human rights organizations
or witnessed any "Declaration of
Human Rights."
At that early stage, Islam declared
that women were the twin halves of men,
as stated in the hadith narrated
by Abu Dawud, Tirmidhi, al-Darimi and
Ahmad. At a time when the Christian
world doubted the humanity of woman and
the nature of her soul, the Qur'an
declared:
( And their Lord has accepted of
them, and answered them: `Never will I
suffer to be lost the work of any of
you, be he male or female: you are
members, one of another') (Qur'an
3:195)
The Prophet (PBUH) accepted women's oath
of Islam and obedience, just as he
accepted that of men. The women's bay`ah
was independent of and separate from
that of their menfolk, and was not done
as an act of blind obedience. This is a
confirmation of the independence of the
Muslim woman's identity, and of their
competence to bear the responsibility of
giving the oath of allegiance and making
the commitment to obey Allah (SWT) and
be loyal to Him and His Messenger. All
of this happened centuries before the
modern world recognized woman's right to
freedom of expression and the right to
vote independently. This is in addition
to other important rights, such as her
independent right to own wealth and her
freedom from the responsibility to spend
on others, even if she is rich, and her
equality with men in human worth,
education, and general religious and
legal duties. A full discussion of the
rights which Islam has given to women,
and the respect which it has bestowed
upon them, is not possible here.
The level of respect, rights and
competence attained by the Muslim woman
is astonishing for Western women. I
remember the comment of an American
woman at a lecture given in the U.S. by
the Syrian scholar Shaykh Bahjat
al-Bitar on the rights of women in
Islam. This lady was amazed at the
rights which the Muslim woman had gained
fifteen hundred years ago; she stood up
and asked, "Is what you say about
the Muslim woman and her rights true or
is it just propagan? If it is true then
take me to live with you for a while,
then let me die!" Many other
Western women have also expressed their
astonishment at the status and respect
given to women in Islam.
The modern Muslim woman, if she
understands all this, is also filled
with admiration for her true religion;
her faith deepens and her conviction of
the greatness and perfection of this
divine program for human happiness, the
well-being of men and women alike -
grows ever stronger. It is sufficient
for her to know that fifteen hundred
years ago Islam achieved more for women
in one blow than any other nation has
achieved in the twentieth century.
It is sufficient to know that the
French Revolution of the late eighteenth
century produced a human-rights document
entitled "Declaration of the Rights
of Man and Citizens" The first
clause of this document states:
"Men are born free and equal under
the laws." There was an attempt to
add the words "and woman," but
this was rejected, and the statement
remained confined to men only: "Man
is born free, and he should not be
enslaved." A century later, the
great French scholar Gustave le Bon, in
the late nineteenth century and early
twentieth century, stated in his book
"The Psychology of Peoples"
that woman had never been equal to man
except in periods of decline; this
comment came in his refutation of
demands that women should be made equal
with men by giving them the same right
to vote.
This is how the situation remained
until the advent of the League of
Nations, following the First World War,
and the United Nations Organization
following the Second World War.
Women's-rights advocates succeeded in
stating the equality of women with men
only after a great deal of hard work,
because they were faced with the
obstacle of quasi-religious traditions
and customs; they did not have access to
any text of national or international
law that treated women with any measure
of justice, which they could have used
to overturn these obstacles and free
women from the oppressive legacy of the
past. Meanwhile, fifteen hundred years
ago, Islam had definitively shown, in
the Qur'an and Sunnah, that men and
women were equal in terms of reward,
punishment, responsibility, worship,
human worth and human rights.
When Islam made men and women equal
in terms of human rights, it also made
them equal in terms of human duties, as
they were both charged with the role of khalifah
(vicegerent) on earth and were commanded
to populate and cultivate it, and to
worship Allah (SWT) therein. Islam gave
each of them his or her unique role to
play in establishing a righteous human
society; these roles are complementary,
not opposite, and they apply to every
man and woman. Each sex must play the
role for which it is better suited and
qualified, in order to build solid
individuals, families and societies and
achieve solidarity, mutual assistance
and co-operation between the two sexes,
without preventing anyone from doing any
permitted deed which he or she wishes to
do. Men and women are equally governed
by whatever is in the interests of
humanity, and both will be rewarded in
accordance with their deeds in this
life, as Allah (SWT) says:
( Whoever works righteousness, man
or woman, and has Faith, verily, to
him will We give a new Life, and life
that is good and pure, and We will
bestow on such their reward according
to the best of their actions.) (Qur'an
16:97)
Both men and women are regarded as
"shepherds" who are
responsible for their
"flocks," as is stated in the
well-known hadith of the Prophet (PBUH).
The Muslim woman who understands the
high status which Islam gave her fifteen
centuries ago knows full well that the
position of women in every nation
governed by ancient laws was appalling,
especially in India and Rome, in the
Middle Ages in Europe, and in Arabia
prior to the advent of Islam. So her
pride in her Islamic identity, true
religion and high human status
increases.
The position of women under ancient
laws may be summed up in the comment of
the Indian leader Jawarharlal Nehru in
his book "The Discovery of
India": "The legal position of
women, according to Manu, was
undoubtedly very bad. They were always
dependent on either a father or a
husband or a son." It is known that
inheritance in India always passed from
male to male, and excluded females
completely.
Nehru commented on this: "In any
case, the position of women in ancient
India was better than that in ancient
Greece or Rome, or during the early
Christian period."
The position of woman in ancient
Roman law was based on a complete denial
of her civic rights, and on requiring
her to be constantly under the tutelage
of a guardian, whether she was a minor
or had reached the age of majority,
simply because she was female. So she
was always under her father's or
husband's tutelage, and had no freedom
whatsoever to do as she wished. In
general, she could be inherited, but she
had no rights of inheritance.
Under Roman law, a woman was simply
one of the possessions of her husband,
deprived of her own identity and freedom
of conduct. The effects of this law are
still visible in the twentieth century,
in most of the modern states whose laws
are still influenced by Roman law.
As a result of the influences of
Roman law, women's position during the
early Christian period was as appalling
as Nehru suggests. Some religious
councils shed doubts on the humanity of
woman and the nature of her soul;
conferences were held in Rome to debate
these matters, and to discuss whether
woman possessed souls like men, or were
their souls like those of animals such
as snakes and dogs? One of these
gatherings in Rome even decided that
women did not possess a soul at all, and
that they would never be resurrected in
the afterlife.
In the Arabian Peninsula, most tribes
prior to the advent of Islam regarded
women as something to be despised and
abhorred. They were seen as a source of
shame, which many would try to avoid by
burying infant girls alive as soon as
they were born.
Islam condemned this appalling
situation of women in more than one
place in the Qur'an. Referring to the
low esteem in which women were held at
the time of jahiliyyah, Allah
(SWT) said:
( When news is brought to one of
them, of [the birth of] a female
[child], his face darkens, and he is
filled with inward grief! With shame
does he hide himself from his people,
because of the bad news he has had!
Shall he retain it on [sufferance and]
contempt, or bury it in the dust? Ah!
What an evil [choice] they decide on!)
(Qur'an 16:58-59)
Explaining the enormity of the crime of
burying alive an innocent infant who has
never committed any sin, Allah (SWT)
says:
( When the female [infant], buried
alive, is questioned - For what crime
she was killed . . .) (Qur'an
81:8-9)
Women were in the most appalling and
humiliating situations, in which their
very humanity was in doubt - especially
in the Arab world before the advent of
Islam, and in most of the civilized
world at that time, in Rome, and during
the early Christian period. Most of the
modern nation-states are still
influenced by Roman law, as is
well-known to scholars of law.125
The Muslim woman understands the
great blessing, which Allah (SWT)
bestowed upon her the day when the
brilliant light of Islam shone upon the
Arab world:
( "This day have I perfected
your religion for you, completed My
favour upon you, and have chosen for
you Islam as your religion) (Qur'an
5:3)
The Muslim woman's soul is filled
with happiness, contentment and pride,
and her status and position are raised
by the fact that Islam gives the
mother a higher status than the
father. A man came to the Prophet
(PBUH) and asked him: "O
Messenger of Allah, who among people
is most deserving of my good
company?" He said, "Your
mother." The man asked,
"Then who?" The Prophet
(PBUH) said, "Your mother."
The man asked, "Then who?"
The Prophet (PBUH) said, "Your
mother." The man asked,
"Then who?" The Prophet
(PBUH) said, "Then your
father."126
Because of the way she is created, the
woman is unique in her ability to bear a
child then breast feed and nurture him,
a role that is difficult and involves
much hardwork, as the Qur'an noted:
( And We have enjoined on man [to
be good] to his parents: in travail
upon travail did his mother bear him,
and in years Twain was his weaning:
[hear the command], `Show gratitude to
Me and to your parents: to Me is [your
final] Goal.) (Qur'an 31:14)
Just as this heavy burden is placed on
women's shoulders, men are given the
role of maintaining and protecting the
family (qawwamun); they have the
duty of earning money and spending on
the family. However, many men still do
not understand the status of the mother
in Islam, as is reflected in the hadith
quoted above, in which a man asked the
Prophet (PBUH) who was most deserving of
his good company.
Islam raised the status of women by
placing the status of the mother above
that of the father, and it has also
given women the right to keep their own
family names after marriage. The Muslim
woman keeps her own surname and identity
after marriage, and does not take her
husband's name, as happens in the West
where the married women is known by her
husband's name as "Mrs.
So-and-so," and her maiden name is
cancelled from civic records. Thus Islam
preserves the woman's identity after
marriage: although the Muslim woman is
strongly urged to be a good wife,
obeying and respecting her husband, her
identity is not to be swallowed up in
his.
If we add to this the fact that Islam
has given women the right to complete
freedom in how they dispose of their own
wealth, and that they are not expected
to spend on anyone else's upkeep, the
high status to which Islam has raised
women becomes crystal-clear. Hence we
can understand how much Islam wants
women to be free, proud, respected, and
able to fulfil their tremendous mission
in life.
Her loyalty is to Allah(SWT)
alone
One of the results of the Muslim
woman's pride in her Islamic identity is
that she will never be loyal to anything
or anyone other than Allah (SWT), not
even her husband or her father, who are
among the closest people to her. We see
the epitome of this loyalty (wala')
in the life of the Prophet's wife Umm
Habibah (May Allah be pleased with her),
Ramlah bint Abi Sufyan, the chief of
Makkah and leader of the mushrikin.
She was married to the Prophet's cousin
(son of his paternal aunt) `Ubaydullah
ibn Jahsh al-Asadi, the brother of the
Prophet's wife Zaynab. Her husband
`Ubaydullah embraced Islam, and she
entered Islam with him, whilst her
father Abu Sufyan was still a kafir.
She and her husband migrated to
Abyssinia with the first Muslims who
went there, and left her father in
Makkah, boiling with rage because his
daughter had embraced Islam and there
was no way he could get at her.
But the life of this patient Muslim
woman was not free from problems. Sadly,
her husband `Ubaydullah left Islam and
became a Christian, joining the religion
of the Abyssinians. He tried to make her
join him in his apostasy, but she
refused and remained steadfast in her
faith. She had given birth to her
daughter Habibah, and was now known as
Umm Habibah. She withdraw from people,
and felt as if she would die of grief
and sorrow because of all the disasters
that had befallen her. She and her
daughter were alone in a strange land,
and all the ties between her and her
father and husband had been cut. The
father of her small daughter was now a
Christian, and the child's grandfather
at that time was a mushrik and an
enemy of Islam who had declared all-out
war on the Prophet in whom she believed
and the religion that she followed.
Nothing could save her from this
distress and grief except the care of
the Prophet (PBUH), who was losing sleep
over the believers who had migrated,
concerned for their welfare and checking
on them. He sent word to the Negus to
request him to arrange his marriage to
Umm Habibah, the daughter of Abu Sufyan,
one of the immigrants to his country, as
is explained in the books of sirah
and history. Thus Umm Habibah, the
daughter of Abu Sufyan, became one of
the "Mothers of the
Believers."
Time passed, and as the conquest of
Makkah drew closer, the threat to
Quraysh, who had broken the treaty of
al-Hudaybiyah, became ever more
apparent. Their leaders met and realized
that Muhammad (PBUH) would never keep
quiet about their betrayal or accept the
humiliation they had inflicted on him.
So they agreed to send and envoy to
Madinah, to negotiate a renewal and
extension of the treaty with Muhammad
(PBUH). The man chosen for this task was
Abu Sufyan ibn Harb.
Abu Sufyan came to Madinah, and was
nervous about meeting Muhammad (PBUH).
Then he remembered that he had a
daughter in the Prophet's household, so
he sneaked into her house and asked her
to help him achieve what he had come
for.
Umm Habibah (May Allah be pleased
with her) was surprised to see him in
her house, as she had not seen him since
she had left for Abyssinia. She stood
up, filled with confusion, not knowing
what to do or say.
Abu Sufyan realised that his daughter
was overwhelmed with the shock of his
sudden arrival, so he asked for her
permission to sit down, and went over to
sit on the bed. He was stunned when his
daughter Ramlah rushed to grab the
mattress and roll it up. He said,
"O my daughter, I do not
understand. Is this mattress not good
enough for me or am I not good enough
for it?" She said, "It belongs
to the Messenger of Allah (PBUH), and
you are a mushrik, so I do not
want you to sit on it."
Ramlah bint Abi Sufyan affirmed her
loyalty (wala') to Allah (SWT).
She had no regrets about her worthless
husband, who had sold his religion for
this world. She remained steadfast in
her faith, bearing the pain of grief and
loneliness in a strange land, where she
was most in need of a husband to protect
her and take care of her daughter. Allah
(SWT), the Munificent Bestower,
compensated her with the best that any
woman could have hoped for at that time,
and made her the wife of the Prophet
(PBUH), and so her status was raised to
that of one of the "Mothers of the
Believers."
The shock of seeing her father so
suddenly after many years did not make
her forget her loyalty to Allah (SWT)
and His Messenger (PBUH). She pulled the
Prophet's mattress away from her father
because he was a kafir, and she
did not want to let him contaminate it
by sitting on it. This is the attitude
of a Muslim woman who is proud of her
religion: her soul is filled with faith
and there is no room for tribalism or
loyalty to any other than Allah (SWT)
and His religion.
Throughout history, Muslim women's
pride in their Islamic identity gave
them the strength and determination to
resist temptations and threats, and
protected them from being overwhelmed by
the forces of kufr and falsehood,
no matter how powerful these were. The
Muslim women's souls were filled with
the unquenchable fire of faith, as we
see in the steadfastness of Pharaoh's
wife, who challenged the entire
Pharaonic world with all its temptations
and pleasures, caring little about the
punishments heaped upon her by her
husband because of her faith, and
repeating her prayer:
( O my Lord! Build for me, in
nearness to You, a mansion in the
Garden, and save me from Pharaoh and
his doings, and save me from those
that do wrong.) (Qur'an 66:11)
Seeking the pleasure of Allah and
striving to make His word supreme on
earth come above any other goals or
ambitions. The true Muslim woman never
forgets this truth, and as time passes
her pride in her Islamic identity, her
devotion to this unique,
divinely-ordained way of life, and her
loyalty to Allah (SWT) go from strength
to strength.
She enjoins what is good and
forbids what is evil
The Muslim woman who understands her
religion reads the ayah:
( The Believers, men and women, are
protectors, one of another: they
enjoin what is just, and forbid what
is evil: they observe regular prayers,
practise regular charity, and obey
Allah and His Messenger. On them will
Allah pour His Mercy: for Allah is
Exalted in Power, Wise.) (Qur'an
9:71)- which Allah (SWT) revealed
fifteen hundred years ago, and she
finds herself on the highest level of
intellectual and social status that
any woman of any nation or race has
ever known. Islam has stated that
women are fully human,and are legally
competent and independent. There is no
difference between women and men when
it comes to owning property, buying or
selling, or arranging a marriage. This
is something which had never
previously been the case in any
nation, where women were seen as
possessions of men, under their
tutelage and command. This ayah,
( The Believers, men and women, are
protectors, one of another . . .) raises
women to the level of loyalty and
friendship with men, and makes them
partners in the work of enjoining what
is good and forbidding what is evil.
Women are responsible for fulfilling
this duty on equal terms with men, as
both are charged with the duty of
populating and cultivating the earth,
and worshipping Allah (SWT) therein.
Thus Islam rescued women from their
position of being mere chattels of men,
which in most cases had given men
control over life and death., and raised
them to the level of equality and
humanity.
When Islam gave women the duty of
enjoining what is good and forbidding
what is evil, it gave her the status of
a human being who, for the first time in
history, was giving orders whereas under
other systems she was the one to whom
orders were always given.
Islam declared that in the sight of
Allah (SWT), both sexes were equally
qualified to worship Him, and were
equally deserving of His mercy. There is
a great deal of proof of this in the
Qur'an and Sunnah.
Our history is filled with women
whose words and deeds reflect their
noble Islamic character. They spoke the
truth, and felt that they had a
responsibility before Allah (SWT) to do
so, and were never afraid to do so.
One example of the strength and
maturity of Muslim women's character,
and the freedom that they had to express
their opinions, is the criticism voiced
by a woman who was listening to the khalifah
`Umar ibn al-Khattab forbidding
excessive dowries and advocating that
they should be limited to a certain
amount. This woman stood up and said,
"You have no right to do that, O
`Umar!" He asked, "Why
not?" She said, "because Allah
(SWT) says:
( But if you decide to take one
wife in place of another, even if you
had given the latter a whole treasure
for dower, take not the least bit of
it back; would you take it by slander
and a manifest wrong?.) (Qur'an
4:20)
`Umar said, "The woman is right,
and the man is mistaken."127
The khalifah `Umar listened to
this woman, and when it became apparent
that she was right, he admitted that she
was right, and he was mistaken. Thus a
Muslim woman set the earliest historic
precedent of criticizing the head of
state, and what a head of state! This
was the rightly-guided khalifah,
the greatest ruler of his age, a man who
was feared, the conqueror of Persia and
Byzantium. This woman could not have
criticized and opposed him if it were
not for her deep understanding of the
religion that had given her the right to
freedom of expression, and commanded her
to enjoin that which was good and forbid
that which was evil.She reads Qur'an
often
In order to reach this high level of
obedience, righteousness and taqwa,
the Muslim woman has no choice but to
seek guidance in the blessed Book of
Allah (SWT), sheltering herself in its
shade every day. She should read Qur'an
regularly, reciting it carefully and
thinking about the meaning of the ayat.
Then its meaning may penetrate her mind
and emotions, and her heart and soul
will be filled with the light of its
pure guidance.It is enough for the
Muslim woman to know the status of the
one who reads Qur'an in the sight of
Allah (SWT), as the Prophet (PBUH)
described it in a number of Hadith.
So she should read Qur'an whenever she
has the opportunity, and her days and
nights should be filled with recitation
of its ayat and reflection upon
its meaning.
The Prophet (PBUH) said:"The
likeness of a believer who reads the
Qur'an is like a citron, whose smell
is pleasant and whose taste is
pleasant; the likeness of a believer
who does not read the Qur'an is like a
date, which has no smell, but its
taste is sweet; the likeness of the
hypocrite who reads the Qur'an is like
a fragrant flower which has a pleasant
smell but whose taste is bitter; and
the likeness of a hypocrite who does
not read the Qur'an is like a
colocynth (bitter-apple), which has no
smell and its taste is bitter."128"Read
the Qur'an, for it will come forward
on the Day of Resurrection to
intercede for its readers."129
"The one who reads the Qur'an
fluently is with the honourable pious
scribes130, and the one who
reads the Qur'an and struggles to read
it even though it is difficult for
him, will receive a double
reward."131
Knowing this, how can any Muslim woman
fail to read the Qur'an, no matter how
busy she is with household duties and
the role of wife and mother? Can she
neglect the Qur'an and deprive herself
of its great blessing and the reward
which Allah (SWT) has prepared for those
who read it?
In conclusion, this is the attitude
of the true Muslim woman towards her
Lord: she has deep faith in Allah (SWT)
(and willingly submits to His will and
decree; she worships Him sincerely,
obeying all His commands and heeding all
His prohibitions; she understands what
it means to be a true servant of Allah
(SWT); she constantly strives to support
His religion and to make His word
supreme on earth; she is proud of her
Muslim identity, which draws its
strength from her understanding of the
purpose of human existence in this life,
as defined by Allah (SWT) in the Qur'an:
( I have only created jinns
and men, that they may serve Me.) (Qur'an
51:56)
Footnotes:
Bab Yaziffun. See Ibn Hijr, Fath
al-Bari Sharh Sahih Bukhari,
published by Dar al-Ma'rifah, vol.
6, p. 396.
See Ihya' 'Ulum al-Din, 1/147.
See Imam al-Baghawi, Sharh
al-Sunnah, 2/176 (Kitab al-salah,
bab fadl al-salawat al-khams);
published by al-Maktab al-Islami.
See Kitab al-salah, bab fadl
al-salawat al-khams.
See Sahih Muslim bi sharh
al-Nawawi, Kitab al-masajid, bab
fadl al-salah al-maktubah fi
jama'ah, 5/170, published by the
Head Office of Academic Research,
Ifta and Da'wah, Saudi Arabia.
Kitab al-taharah, bab fadl
al-wudu' wa'l-salah 'aqabahu.
Fath al-Bari, 1/482, bab fi kam
tualli al-mar'ah fi'l-t hiyab.
(Bukhari and Muslim) See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 2/195, Kitab al-salah,
bab ta'jil salat al-fajr.
(Bukhari and Muslim) See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 3/410, Kitab al-salah,
bab takhfif fi amrin yahdath.
Abu Dawud, 1/221, Kitab al-salah,
bab ma ja'a fi khuruj al-nisa' ila
al-masjid; Ahmad, 2/76; it is hasan
li ghayrihi.
Fat al-Bari, 2/351, Kitab
al-adhan, bab isti'dhan al-mar'ah
zawjaha bi'l-khuruj ila'l-masjid;
Sahih Muslim, 4/161, Kitab al-salah,
bab khuruj al-nisa' ila'l-masajid.
Fatal-Bari, 2/382, kitab
al-jumu'ah, bab al-idhn li'l-nisa'
bi'l-khuruj ila'l-masajid.
See Fath al-Bari, commentary on
Sahih Bukhari, 1/506, Kitab
al-salah, bab ma ja'a fi'l-qiblah;
Sahih Muslim, 5/10, Kitab al-salah,
bab tahwil al-qiblah min al-quds
ila'l-ka'bah.
Sahih Muslim, 6/162, Kitab
al-jumu'ah, Bab tahiyyah al-masjid
wa'l-imam yukhtub.
Sahih Muslim, 6/160, Kitab
al-jumu'ah, Bab khutbah al-hajah.
This hadith, narrated by 'Abdullah
ibn 'Umar, is recorded by Abu
'Awanah, Ibn Khazimah and Ibn Hibban
in their Sahihs; see also Fath
al-Bari, 2/357, Kitab al-jumu'ah,
bab fadl al-ghusl yawm al-jumu'ah.
See Fath al-Bari, 3/236, 237,
Kitab al-jana'iz, bab ma ja'a fi
'adhab al-qabar.
See Fath al-Bari, 2/529, Kitab
al-kusuf, bab al-sadaqah fi'l-kusuf;
Sahih Muslim, 6/212, Kitab al-kusuf,
bab ma 'arada 'ala al-Nabi (SAAS) fi
salat al-kusuf min al-jannah
wa'l-nar.
See Sahih Muslim, 18/84, Kitab
al-fitan wa ashrat al-sa'ah, bab
qadiyyah al-jasasah.
Reported by Ahmad, see silsilah
al-Hadith al-sahihah, no. 900,
2/601.
See Fath al-Bari, 2/347, Kitab
al-adhan, bab khuruj al-nisa'
ila'l-masajid; Sahih Muslim, 5/137,
Kitab al-masajid, bab waqt al-'isha'
wa ta'khiriha.
Sahih Muslim, 4/159, Kitab
al-salah, bab tawiyyah al-sufuf wa
iqamatiha.
See Fath al-Bari, 2/349, Kitab
al-adhan, bab intidar al-nas qiyam
al-imam al-'alim.
(Bukhari and Muslim) See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 3/273, Kitab al-salah,
bab al-tasbih idha nabaha shay'
fi'l-salah.
Al-Mudawwanah, 1/106.
See Sahih Muslim, 4/161, 162,
Kitab al-salah, bab khuruj al-nisa'
ila'l-masajid.
Ibid., 4/162, 163.
Ibid., 4/161
Fath al-Bari, 2/382, Kitab
al-jumu'ah, bab al-idhn li'l-nisa'
bi'l-khuruj ila'l-masajid; Sahih
Muslim, 4/161, Kitab al-salah, bab
khuruj al-nisa' ila'l-masajid.
Sahih Muslim, 4/161, kitab
al-salah, bab khuruj al-nisa'
ila'l-masajid.
Ibid., 4/163
Ibid., 4/163
Ibid., 4/163
Ibid., 6/178, 179, Kitab salat
al-'idayn, bab ibahah khuruj
al-nisa' fi'l-'idayn ila'l-musalla.
Ibid., 6/179, Kitab salat
al-'idayn, bab ibahah khuruj
al-nisa' fi'l-'idayn ila'l-musalla.
Ibid., 6/180, Kitab salat
al-'idayn, bab ibahah khuruj
al-nisa' fi'l-'idayn ila'l-musalla.
Fath al-Bari, 2/469, Kitab
al-'idayn, bab idha lam yukun laha
jilbab fi'l-'id.
Fath al-Bari, 2/469, Kitab
al-'idayn, bab idha lam yukun laha
jilbab fi'l-'id.
Fath al-Bari, 2/466, Kitab
al-'idayn, bab maw'izah al-imam
al-nisa'a yawm al-'id; Sahih Muslim,
6/174, Kitab salat al-'idayn.
Ibn Hijr mentioned in Fath
al-Bari, 2/468, that she was Asma'
bint Yazid ibn al-Sakan, who was
known as the spokeswoman for the
women, and was a very confident
woman.
Fath al-Bari, 2/466, Kitab
al-'idayn, bab maw'izat al-imam
al-nisa'a yawn al-'id; Sahih Muslim,
6/171, Kitab salat al-'idayn.
See Ibn al-Jawzi, Ahkam al-nisa',
186, 204 (Beirut edition); Ibn
Qudamah, al-Mughni, 2/202 (Riyadh
edition).
Fath al-Bari, 11/341, Kitab
al-riqaq, bab al-tawadu'
Sahih Muslim, 16/184, Kitab
al-birr wa'l-adab wa'l-silah, bab
idha ahabba Allahu 'abdan.
(Bukhari and Muslim) See Sharh
al-Sunnah 4/45, Kitab al-salat, bab
al-ijtihad fi qiyam al-layl.
See Sahih Muslim, 6/72, 73, Kitab
salat al-musafirin, bab fadilat
al-'aml al-da'im.
Ibid., 6/73.
Ibid., 6/72.
See Sahih Muslim, 6/70-72, Kitab
salah al-musafirin, bab fadilah
al-'aml al-da'im.
Ibid., 5/89, 90, Kitab al-masajid,
bab istihbab al-dhikr ba'd al-salah.
See Imam al-Nawawi, Riyadh
al-Salihin, p. 621, Kitab al-adhkar,
bab fadl al-dhikr wa'l-hathth
'alayhi; Sahih Muslim, 5/83-95,
Kitab al-masajid, bab al-dhikr ba'd
al-salat.
See Sahih Muslim, 5/95, Kitab
al-masajid, bab al-dhikr ba'd
al-salah.
See Sahih Muslim, 1/207, Kitab
al-iman, bab wujub qital tarik ahad
arkan al-Islam.
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 6/217, Kitab al-siyam,
bab thawab man sama Ramadan.
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Riyad
al-Salihin, p. 570, Kitab
al-fada'il, bab fi amr al-sa'im bi
hifz lisanihi wa jawarihihi 'an
al-mukhalifat.
Fath al-Bari, 4/116, Kitab
al-sawm, bab man lam yada' qawl
al-zur wa'l-'aml bihi fi'l-sawm.
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 6/221, Kitab al-sawm, bab
fadl al-sawm.
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 4/116, Abwab al-nawafil,
bab qiyam shahr Ramadan wa fadluhu.
Sahih Muslim, 8/70, Kitab al-sawm,
bab al-ijtihad fi'l-'ashar
al-awakhir min shahr Ramadan.
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 6/389, Kitab al-siyam,
bab al-ijtihad fi'l-'ashar
al-awakhir.
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 6/380, Kitab al-siyam,
bab ma ja'a fi laylat al-adr.
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 6/379, Kitab al-siyam,
bab ma ja'a fi laylat al-qadr.
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 6/251, Kitab al-siyam,
bab fadl al-suhur.
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 6/253, Kitab al-siyam,
bab fadl al-suhur.
Sahih Muslim, 8/51, Kitab
al-siyam, bab istihbab siyam yawm
'Arafat.
Sahih Muslim, 8/12, Kitab
al-siyam, bab sawm yawm 'ashura'.
Sahih Muslim, 8/51, Kitab
al-siyam, bab istihbab siyam yawm
'ashura'.
Sahih Muslim, 8/13, Kitab
al-siyam, bab sawm yawm 'ashura'.
Sahih Muslim, 8/56, Kitab
al-siyam: bab istahbab siyam sittat
ayam min shawwal.
Fath al-Bari, 4/226, Kitab
al-sawm, bab siyam ayam al-bid;
Sahih Muslim, 5/234, Kitab salat
al-musafirin, bab istihbab salat
al-duha.
Sahih Muslim, 5/235, Kitab salat
al-musafirin, bab istihbab salat
al-duha.
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 6/362, Kitab al-siyam,
bab sawm al-dahr.
Sahih Muslim, 8/48, Kitab
al-siyam, bab istihbab siyam
thalathat ayyam min kulli shahr.
Fath al-Bari, 4/72, Kitab jaza'
al-sayd, bab hajj al-nisa'.
Fath al-Bari, 4/72, Kitab jaza'
al-sayd, bab hajj al-nisa'
Sahih Muslim, 15/56, 54, Kitab
al-fada'il, bab hawd nabiyyina
(SAAS) wa siffatuhu.
A jahili form of divorce where the
husband told his wife "You are
to me like the back of my
mother." According to
pre-Islamic Arabian custom, this
freed the husband from marital
duties, but effectively imprisoned
the woman as she was not free to
leave her husband's home or enter
into another marriage; the husband
was also not obliged to provide for
the children of the marriage.The
Qur'an clearly abolished this cruel
and oppressive practice. See Yusuf
Ali's Note Number 5330. [Translator]
Wasq: the amount of fruit a
date-palm would bear in one season.
[Author]
Faraq: a measurement of weight
approximately equivalent to 60
kilograms. [Author]
See Mukhtasar Tafsir Ibn Kathir,
3/459, Surat al-Mujadilah 58:1-4
(published by Dar al-Qur'an
al-Karim, Beirut.)
See Fath al-Bari, 13/402, Kitab
al-Tawhid, bab wa kana 'arshuhu
'ala'l-ma'.
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 7/18, Kitab al-Hajj, bab
al-mar'ah la takhruj illa ma'a
mahram.
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 9/26, Kitab al-nikah, bab
al-nahy 'an an yakhlu al-rajul
bi'l-mar'ah al-ajnabiyyah.
Juyubihinna includes the face and
neck as well as the bosom.
[Translator]
Sahih Muslim, 14/109, Kitab
al-libas wa'l-zinah, bab al-nisa'
al-kasiyat al-'ariyat.
Fath al-Bari, 8/489, Kitab
al-tafsir, bab walyadribna bi
khumurihinna 'ala juyubihinna.
See Fath al-Bari Sharh Sahih
Bukhari, 8/489, 490, Kitab
al-tafsir, bab walyadribna bi
khumurihinna 'ala juyubihinna.
Al-Mujtama' magazine, Kuwait,
issue no. 932.
Al-Mujtama' magazine, Kuwait,
issue no. 931.
Ibid.
Fath al-Bari, 9/420, Kitab
al-talaq, bab idha aslamat
al-mushrikah aw al-nasraniyyah taht
al-dhimmi aw al-harbi.
Sahih Bukhari; see Fath al-Bari,
2/566, Kitab taqsir al-salat, bab fi
kam yaqsur al-salat.
Sahih Muslim, 9/103, Kitab
al-Hajj, bab safar al-mar'ah ma'a
mahram.
See: Sharh Sahih Muslim,
9/102-109, Kitab al-Hajj, bab safar
al-mar'ah ma'a mahram.
Sahih Muslim, 18/25, Kitab
al-zuhd, bab fi Hadith mutafarriqah,
al-Isabah, 8/66,67
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 10/61, Kitab al-imarah
wa'l-qada', bab al-ra'i mas'ul 'an
ra'iyatihi
Reported by Tirmidhi, 4/34, at the
end of the section on zuhd; it is a
hasan hadith.
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 1/401, Kitab al-taharah,
bab al-niyyah fi'l-wudu' wa ghayrihi
min al-'ibadat.
Tabaqat Ibn Sa'd, 8/280 (Beirut
edition).
See Tabaqat Ibn Sa'd, 7/35 and
al-Isabah, 8/83.
See Sirat Ibn Hisham: al-hijrah
ila'l-Madinah.
See Fath al-Bari Sharh Sahih
Bukhari, 7/233, 240, Kitab manaqib
al-Ansar, bab hijrat al-Nabi wa
ashabihi ila'l-Madinah, and 6/129,
Kitab al-jihad, bab haml al-zad
fi'l-ghazw.
Ibn al-Jawzi, Ahkam al-Nisa', 439.
See Sahih Muslim, 12/194, Kitab
al-jihad wa'l-siyar, bab al-nisa'
al-ghaziyat.
See Sahih Muslim, 12/188, Kitab
al-jihad wa'l-siyar, bab ghazwat
al-nisa'.
See Fath al-bari, 6/80, Kitab
al-jihad, bab mudawamat al-nisa'
al-jarha fi'l-ghazw.
Fath al-Bari, 7/361, Kitab
al-maghazi, bab idh hammat ta'ifatan
minkum an tufshila; Sahih Muslim,
12/189, Kitab al-jihad wa'l-siyar,
bab ghazwat al-nisa' ma'a al-rijal.
Fath al-Bari, 6/79, Kitab
al-jihad, bab haml al-nisa' al-qurab
ila'l-nas fi'l-ghazw and 7/366,
Kitab al-maghazi, bab dhikr Umm
Salit.
See Fath al-Bari, 7/372, Kitab
al-maghazi, bab ma asaba al-Nabi (r)
min al-jirah yawma Uhud.
See the reports on the Battle of
Uhud in the Sirah of Ibn Hisham, and
in Insan al-'Uyun, al-Athar
al-Muhammadiyyah, the Tabaqat of Ibn
Sa'd, al-Isabah, and Asad al-Ghabah.
See Siyar a'lam al-nubala', 2/281.
Those who entered Islam on the day
of the Conquest of Makkah. [Author]
Sahih Muslim, 12/187, 188, Kitab
al-jihad wa'l-siyar, bab ghazwat
al-nisa' ma'a al-rijal.
Al-Rumaysa': a nickname of Umm
Sulaym, on account of a ramas (white
secretion) in her eye. [Author]
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 14/86, Kitab fada'il
al-sahabah, bab fada'il 'Umar ibn
al-Khattab.
i.e., the wife of Mu'awiyah.
[Author]
Fath al-Bari 6/76, Kitab al-jihad,
bab ghazw al-mar'ah fi'l-bahr.
Al-Hilyah, 2/62; Siffat al-safwah,
2/70.
See al-Maghazi, 1/278; Ansab
al-Ashraf, 1/326; al-Bayhaqi,
Dala'il al-Nubuwwah, 3/311.
Al-bidayah wa'l-nihayah, 7/13; see
also al-Tabari, al-Tarikh, 2/335ff
(published by Dar al-Kutub
al-'Ilmiyyah).
Al-Isabah, 4/229; see also Majma'
al-Zawa'id by al-Haythami, who
quotes this story, stating that it
was narrated by al-Tabarani and that
the men of its isnad are thiqat. See
also Siyar a'lam al-nubala', 2/297.
See Siyar a'lam al-nubala', 2/297.
See Dr. Ma'ruf al-Dawalibi,
Al-mar'ah fi'l-Islam, p. 23.
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 13/4, Kitab al-isti'dhan,
bab birr al-walidayn.
See Fath al-Bari, Kitab al-nikah;
also Shaykh 'Ali al-Tantawi, Akhbar
'Umar, p 393.
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Sharh
al-Sunnah 4/431, Kitab fada'il
al-Qur'an: bab fadl tilawat
al-Qur'an.
Sahih Muslim, 6/90, Kitab salat
al-musafirin, bab fadl qira'at
al-Qur'an.
i.e., the angels who record the
deeds of man. The meaning is that
one who is well-versed in Qur'an
will enjoy such a high status in the
Hereafter that he will be in the
exalted company of these pious
scribes. [Translator]
(Bukhari and Muslim), See Sharh
al-Sunnah, 4/429, 430, Kitab fada'il
al-Qur'an, bab fadl tilawat
al-Qur'an.
The
materials provided here are ONLY
extracts of Arabic-English
Dictionary Of Sheikh Adelabu
(Ph. D. Damas). Fully
edited versions and better
formats are available upon
written requests from awqafafrica.com
and Awqaf Africa Muslim Open
College, London.
Alphabetical
Entries Indexed For
Arabic-English Dictionary Of
Sheikh Adelabu (Ph. D. Damas) ::
ألفبيات
مادّات
مفهرسة
للقاموس
العربي
الإنجليزي
للشيخ
أديلابو
-
دكتوراه
من
دمسق
Studying
Grammars And Linguistics Of The
Kitaab And Sunnah Under Sheikh
Adelabu, Ph. D. Damas
Users
or reproducers of this
Arabic-English Dictionary Of
Sheikh Adelabu (Ph. D. Damas)
for the purposes of Da'wah and
Islamic Studies do not need a
permission. However, awqafafrica.com
suggests users or reproducers
quote this site and/or the sole
author of this dictionary -
Sheikh Adelabu (Ph. D. Damas).
This dictionary is not for
commercial gains or profit
making. It's intended by
our Sheikh to be an act of 'Iba^dah.
May Allah accept it from our
Sheikh
The Encyclopedic Dictionary Of As-Sunnah
- Hadith By Sheikh Adelabu
(Ph. D. Damas) is only available
on this portal to proven Du'aat
and known or recommended students
of Knowledge. Learned
individuals can acquired all
volumes and full packages of the
Encyclopedia.
Arabic
English Dictionary Of Sheikh
Adelabu (Ph. D. Damas) ::
قاموس
عربي -
إنجليزي
للشيخ
أديلابو
-
دكتوراه
من
دمشق -