Safiyya bint Huyayy, (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 seventeen
years old. As in the case of juwayriyya bint Harith, this marriage occurred
after one of the Muslims' decisive battles, in this case, the battle of Khaybar.
After the battle of Khaybar in which the Muslims defeated the Jews, two women
were brought before the Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon
him) by Bilal, the black mu'adhdhin of Medina whose beautifully piercing voice
constantly called the Muslims to prayer right up until the Prophet's death-
after which he could not bring himself to call the adhan anymore, until he was
present at the surrender of Jerusalem to the khalif Umar in 17 AH. They had
passed by those who had been killed in the fighting. One of the two women was
shrieking and screaming, and rubbing dust in her hair, while the other was mute
with shock.
The silent one was Safiyya, the
daughter of Huyayy ibn Akhtab, the chief of the Banu Nadir who had all been
expelled from Medina in 4 AH after plotting to kill the Messenger of Allah by
dropping a stone on his head as he sat talking with their leaders. The noisy one
was Safiyya's cousin. Safiyya could trace her lineage directly back to Harun,
the brother of the Prophet Moses (peace be upon them). The Prophet Muhammad
(peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) asked someone to look after the woman
who was screaming and then took off his cloak and placed it over the shoulders
of Safiyya, whose husband had been killed in the battle. It was a gesture of
pity, but from that moment she was to be honored and given great respect in the
Muslim community. Then the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him)
turned to Bilal and said, "Bilal, has Allah plucked mercy from your heart that
you let these two women pass by those of their menfolk who have been killed?"
This was considered a severe reprimand, for the Messenger of Allah (peace and
blessings of Allah be upon him) rarely criticized the behavior of those who
served him. Anas ibn Malik, for example once said, "I served the Messenger of
Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) for eight years. He never once
scolded me for something that I had done or for something that I had not done."
Like Umm Habiba, Safiyya was the
daughter of a great chief. The only person who could save her from becoming a
slave after having enjoyed such a high position was the Prophet. Although her
father had planned to assassinate Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon
him) after the battle of Uhud, and had conspired with the Banu Qurayza to
exterminate all the Muslims during the battle of al-Khandaq, it was
characteristic of the Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon
him) that he did not bear any grudges. For those who did wrong, he felt pity
rather than anger, and for those who had done no wrong, he had even greater
compassion. The Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him)
invited Safiyya to embrace Islam, which she did, and having given her, her
freedom, he then married her. Some people may have wondered how it was that
Safiyya could accept Islam and marry the Prophet when her father had been his
bitter enemy, and when bloody battles had taken place between the Jews and the
Muslims. The answer may be found in what she has related of her early life as
the daughter of the chief of the Banu Nadir.
She said, (may Allah be pleased with
her): "I was my father's favorite and also a favorite with my uncle Yasir. They
could never see me with one of their children without picking me up. When the
Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) came to Medina, my
father and my uncle went to see him. It was very early in the morning and
between dawn and sunrise. They did not return until the sun was setting. They
came back worn out and depressed, walking with slow, heavy steps. I smiled to
them as I always did, but neither of them took any notice of me because they
were so miserable. I head Abu Yasir ask my father, 'Is it him?' 'Yes, it is.'
'Can you recognize him? Can you verify it?' 'Yes, I can recognize him too well.'
'What do you feel towards him?' 'Enmity, enmity as long as I live.'
The significance of this conversation
is evident when we recall that in the Torah of the Jews, it was written that a
Prophet would come who would lead those who followed him to victory. Indeed
before the Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) came to
Medina, the Jews used to threaten the idol worshippers of Yathrib, as it was
then called, that when the next Prophet came to the believers were going to
exterminate them, just as the Jews had exterminated other tribes who refused to
worship God in the past. As in any case, of the Prophet Jesus, (peace and
blessings of Allah be upon him) who had been clearly described in the Torah -
but rejected by many of the Jews when he actually came - the next and last
Prophet was accurately described in the Torah, which also contained signs by
which the Jews could easily recognize him. Thus Ka'b al-Ahbar, one of the Jews
of that time who embraced Islam, relates that this Prophet is described in the
Torah as follows:
'My slave, Ahmad, the Chosen, born in
Mecca, who will emigrate to Medina (or he said Tayyiba - another name given to
Yathrib); his community will be those who praise Allah in every
state.'
And 'Amr ibn al-'As said that it also
says in the Torah:
'O Prophet, We have sent you as a
witness, a bringer of good news and a warner and a refuge for the illiterate.
You are My slave and My messenger. I have called you the one on whom people
rely, one who is neither coarse nor vulgar, and who neither shouts in the
markets nor repays evil with evil, but rather pardons and forgives. Allah will
not take him back to Himself until the crooked community has been straightened
out by him and they say, "There is no god but Allah." Through him, blind eyes,
deaf ears and covered hearts will be opened.'
It was thanks to these descriptions in
the Torah, that the most learned rabbi of the Jews, 'Abdullah ibn Salam, had
embraced Islam on seeing Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) and
it was because of these descriptions that Huyayy ibn Akhtab was also able to
recognize him. However Huyayy, like most of the other Jews, was deeply
disappointed that the last Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him)
was a descendant of Isma'il and not of Ishaq, (the two sons of the Prophet
Ibrahim, peace be upon them), since the Jews of that time claimed exclusive
descent from Ishaq, through the twelve sons of his son Ya'qub (who was also
known as Israel), from whom the twelve tribes of Israel had originated. Not only
did Huyayy resent the fact that the last Prophet had appeared amongst the Arabs,
but also he did not want to lose his position of power and leadership over his
people.
It was for these reasons that Huyayy
secretly decided to oppose and fight the Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings
of Allah be upon him) while in public he and the other leaders of the Jews made
peace treaties with the Muslims and the Jews broke as soon as it seemed a
favorable time to do so. Although Safiyya was Huyayy's daughter, she had a pure
heart and had always wanted to worship her Creator and Lord, the One who had
sent Moses, to whom she was related, and Jesus, and finally Muhammad, may Allah
be pleased with all of them. Thus as soon as the opportunity arose, not only to
follow the last Prophet, but also to be married to him, she took it. Although
Safiyya had in Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) a most kind
and considerate husband, she was not always favorably accepted by some of his
other wives, especially when she had first joined the Prophet's household. It is
related by Anas that on one occasion, the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah
be upon him) found Safiyya weeping. When he asked her what the matter was, she
replied that she heard thHafsa had disparagingly described her as 'the daughter
of a Jew'.
The Prophet (peace and blessings of
Allah be upon him) responded by saying, "You are certainly the daughter of a
Prophet (Harun), and certainly your uncle was a Prophet (Moses), and you are
certainly the wife of a Prophet (Muhammad), so what is there in that to be
scornful towards you?" Then he said to Hafsa, "O Hafsa, fear Allah!"
Once the Prophet was accompanied on a
journey by Safiyya and Zaynab bint Jahsh when Safiyya' s camel went lame. Zaynab
had an extra camel and the Prophet asked her if she would give it to Safiyya.
Zaynab retorted, "Should I give to that Jewess!" The Prophet turned away from
her in anger and would not have anything to do with her for two or three months
not to show his disapproval of what she had said. Some three years later, when
Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) was in his final illness,
Safiyya felt for him deeply and sincerely. "O Messenger of Allah," she said, "I
wish it was I who was suffering instead of you." Some of the wives winked at
each other which made the Prophet cross and he exclaimed, "By Allah, she spoke
the truth!"
She still underwent difficulties after
the death of the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him). Once a
slavegirl she owned went to the Amir al Muminin Umar and said, "Amir al Muminin!
Safiyya loves the Sabbath and maintains ties with the Jews!" Umar asked Safiyya
about that and she said, "I have not loved the Sabbath since Allah replaced it
with Friday for me, and I only maintain ties with those Jews to whom I am
related by kinship." She asked her slavegirl what had possessed her to carries
lie to Umar and the girl replied, "Shaytan!" Safiyya said, "Go, you are free."
Safiyya was with the Prophet for nearly
four years, She was only twenty-one when the Prophet (peace and blessings of
Allah be upon him) died, and lived as a widow for the next thirty-nine years,
dying in 50 AH, at the age of sixty (may Allah be pleased with
her).
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