Maymuna bint al-Harith, (may Allah be
pleased with her), married the Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be
upon him) in 7 AH, when the Prophet was sixty years old and she was thirty six
years old. Maymuna's sister, Umm al-Fadl Lubaba, was the mother of Abdullah ibn
Abbas, the son of one of the uncles of the Prophet and the one of the wisest of
his Companions. Umm al-Fadl was one of the earliest Companions of the Prophet.
Once Abu Lahab, the enemy of Allah and the Messenger of Allah, entered the house
of his brother, al-Abbas, and proceeded to attack Abbas client, Abu Rafi,
because he had embraced Islam. Abu Lahab knocked him to the ground and knelt on
him, continuing to beat him. Umm al Fadl grabbed a post that was there and
cracked it across Abu Lahab's head, saying, "Will you victimize him because his
master is absent?" He treated in shame and died a week later.
Zaynab bint Khuzayma, Umm al Muminin,
was also her half-sister. Her other sisters included Asma bint Umays, the wife
of Ja'far ibn Abi Talib, who later married Abu Bakr, and Salma bint Umays, the
wife of Hamza, the "Lion of Allah". Her full sisters were Lubaba, Asma and Izza.
Maymuna was thus one of the 'Ahlul- Bayt' , 'the people of the House', not only
by virtue of being a wife of the Prophet, (peace and blessings of Allah be upon
him) but also because she was related to him. Zayd bin Arqam related that the
Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said, "I implore
you by Allah! The People of my House!" three times. Zayd was asked who were the
People of the House, and he said, "The family of Ali ibn Abi Talib, the family
of Jafar ibn Abi Talib, the family Aqil ibn Abi Talib, and the family of Al
Abbas ibn Abdal Muttalib."
Maymuna or Barra as she was then
called, yearned to marry the Prophet. She went to her sister, Umm al Fadl to
talk to her about that and she, in turn, spoke to her husband, al-Abbas.
Al-Abbas immediately went to the Messenger (peace and blessings of Allah be upon
him) with Maymuna's offer of marriage to him and her proposal was accepted. When
the good news reached her, she was on a camel, and she immediately got off the
camel and said, "The camel and what is on it is for the Messenger of Allah
(peace and blessings of Allah be upon him)." They were married in the month of
Shawwal in 7 AH just after the Muslims of Medina were permitted to visit Mecca
under the terms of the treaty of Hudaybiyya to perform umra. Allah Almighty sent
the following ayat about this:
Any
believing woman who dedicates herself to the Prophet if the Prophet wishes to
wed her, that is only for thee and not for the believers. (Quran
33:50)
The Prophet gave her the name, Maymuna,
meaning "blessed", and Maymuna lived with the Prophet for just over three years,
until his death. She was obviously very good natured and got on well with
everyone, and no quarrel or disagreement with any of the Prophet's other wives
has been related about her. 'A'isha said about her, "Among us, she had the most
fear of Allah and did the most to maintain ties of kinship." It was in her room
that the Prophet first began to feel the effects of what became his final
illness and asked the permission of his wives to stay in A'isha's room while it
lasted.
After the Prophet's death, (peace and
blessings of Allah be upon him) Maymuna continued to live in Medina for another
forty years, dying at the age of eighty, in 51 AH, (may Allah be pleased with
her), being the last of the Prophet's wives to die. She asked to be buried where
had married the Prophet at Saraf and her request was carried out. It is related
that at the funeral of Maymuna, Ibn Abbas said, "This is the wife of Allah's
Messenger, (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) so when you lift her bier,
do not shake her or disturb her, but be gentle." It is also related by Ibn Abbas
that he once stayed the night as a guest of Maymuna, who was his aunt, and the
Prophet, (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) They slept on their blanket
lengthways and he slept at the end, crossways. After they had all slept for
awhile, the Prophet rose in the middle of the night to pray the tahajjud prayer,
and Ibn Abbas joined him.
They both did wudu, and he prayed
eleven rakats with the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him). Then
they both went back to sleep again until dawn. Bilal called the adhan, and the
Prophet did another two short rakats, before going into the mosque to lead the
Dawn Prayer.
Ibn Abbas said that one of the dua'ahs
that the Prophet made during this night was : "O Allah, place light in my heart,
light in my tongue, light in my hearing, light on my sight, light behind me,
light in front of me, light on my right, light on my left, light above me and
light below me; place light in my sinew, in my flesh, in my blood, in my hair
and in my skin; place light in my soul and make light abundant for me; make me
light and grant me light."
It is commonly agreed that it was after
the Prophet had married Maymuna, giving him now nine wives (A'isha, Sawda,
Hafsa, Umm Salama, Zainab bint Jahsh, Juwayriyya, Umm Habiba, Safiyya and
Maymuna), that the following ayat was revealed:
It is not
lawful for you (O Muhammad, to marry more) women after this, nor to exchange
them for other wives, even though their beauty is pleasing to you, except those
whom your right hand possesses (as maid servants); and Allah is always watching
over everything. (Quran 33:52)
After this, the Prophet (peace and
blessings of Allah be upon him) did not marry again. When however, the Christian
ruler, or Muqawqis, of Egypt, sent him two Christian slave girls 0 who were
sisters as a gift (in response to the Prophet's letter inviting him to embrace
Islam), along with a fine robe and some medicine the Prophet, accepted one of
the slave girls, Maria, into his household; he gave her sister Serene, to a man
whom he wished to honor, namely Hassan ibn Thabit; he accepted the robe; and he
returned the medicine with the message, "My Sunna is my medicine!" This occurred
in 7 AH, when the Prophet wassixty years old and Maria was twenty years
old.
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