Umm Salama Hind bint Abi Umayya, may
Allah be pleased with her, was married to the Prophet (peace and blessings of
Allah be upon him) in 4 AH at the age of twenty nine, after her first husband,
Abdullah ibn Abdul Asad, had died from the wounds he had received while fighting
at the battle of Uhud. Umm Salama and Abdal Asad had been among the first people
to embrace Islam in the early days of the Muslim community in Mecca. They had
suffered at the hands of the Quraish who had tried to force them to abandon
their new faith, and had been among the first group of Muslims to seek refuge
under the protection of the Negus in Abyssinia. When they had returned to Mecca,
believing that the situation of the Muslims had improved, they had found instead
that if anything it was worse. Rather than return to Abyssinia, Abdal Asad and
Umm Salama had received the Prophet's permission to immigrate to Medina, but
this proved not to be as easy as they might have imagined.
In the words of Umm Salama: "When Abu
Salama (my husband) decided to leave for Medina, he prepared a camel for me,
lifted me up onto it and put my son Salama on my lap. My husband then took the
lead and went straight ahead without stopping or waiting for anything. Before we
were out of Mecca, however, some men from my tribe, the Banu Mahkhzum, stopped
us and said to my husband: "Although you may be free to do what you like with
yourself, you have no power over your wife. She is our daughter. DO you expect
us to allow you to take her away from us?' They then grabbed hold of him and
snatched me away from him. Some men from my husband's tribe, the Banu Abdul
Asad, saw them taking both me and my child and became hot with rage: "No, by
Allah!' They shouted. 'We shall not abandon the boy. He is our son and we have a
rightful claim over him.' So they took him by his arm and pulled him away from
me. Suddenly, in the space of a few minutes, I found myself all alone. My
husband headed out towards Medina by himself; his tribe had snatched away my son
from me; and my own tribe had overpowered me and forced me to stay with them.
From the day that my husband and my son were parted from me, I went out at noon
every day and sat at the spot where this tragedy had occurred. I would remember
those terrifying moments and weep until nightfall.
"I continued like this for a year or so
until one day a man from the Banu Umayya passed by and saw my condition. He went
to my tribe and said, 'Why don't you free this woman? You have caused both her
husband and her son to betaken away from her.' He went on like this, trying to
soften their hearts and appealing to their emotions, until at last they said to
me, 'Go and join your husband if you wish.' But how could I join my husband in
Medina, and leave my son, part of my own flesh and blood, in Mecca among the
Banu Abdul Asad? How could I remain free from anguish, and my eyes free from
tears, if I were to reach the place of hijrah not knowing anything of my little
son left behind in Mecca?
"Some people realized what I was going
through and their hearts went out to me. They approached the Banu Abdul Asad on
my behalf and persuaded them to return my son. I had no desire to remain in
Mecca until I could find someone to travel with me, for I was afraid that
something might happen that would delay me or stop me from reaching my husband.
So I immediately prepared my camel, placed my son on my lap, and set out in the
direction of Medina. I just had just reached Tan'im (3 miles from Mecca) when I
met Uthman ibn Talha (He as in charge of looking after the Ka'ba, but did not
embrace Islam until the Conquest of Mecca). "'Were are you going, Bint Zad ar
Rakib?' he asked. 'I am going to my husband in Medina.' 'And isn't there anyone
going with you?' 'No, by Allah, except Allah and my little boy here.' 'By
Allah,' he vowed, 'I will not leave you until you reach Medina.'
He then took the reins of my camel and
led us on our way. By Allah, I have never met an Arab more generous and noble
than he. Whenever we reached a resting-place, he would make my camel kneel down,
wait until I had dismounted and then lead the camel to a tree and tether it.
Then he would go and rest in the shade of a different tree to me. When we had
rested, he would get the camel ready again and then lead us on our way. This he
did every day until we reached Medina. When we reached a village near Quba
(about two miles from Medina), belonging to the Banu Amr ibn Awf, he said, 'Your
husband is in this village. Enter it with the blessings of Allah.' Then he
turned round and headed back to Mecca."
Thus after many difficult months of
separation, Umm Salama and her son were reunited with Abu Salama, and in the
next few years that followed, they were always near the heart of the growing
Muslim community of Medina al Munawarra. They were present when the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) and Abu Bakr (may Allah be pleased
with him) arrived safely from Mecca, and at the battle of Badr Abu Salama fought
bravely. At the battle of Uhud, however, he was badly wounded. At first his
wound appeared to respond well to treatment, but then his wounds re opened after
an expedition against the Banu Abdul Asad, and after that they refused to heal
and he remained bedridden. Once while Umm Salama was nursing him, he said to
her, "I once heard the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon
him) that whenever a calamity afflicts anyone he should say what Allah has
commanded him to say: 'Inna lillahi wa inna ilayhi raji'un!' 'Surely we come
from Allah and surely to Him we return!' and then he should say, 'O Lord, reward
me for my affliction and give me something better than it in return, which only
You, the Exalted the Mighty, can give.'"
Abu Salama remained sick in bed for
several days. One morning the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him)
came to see him. The visit was longer than usual, and while the Prophet was
still at his bedside, Abu Salama died. With his blessed hands, the Prophet
closed the eyes of his dead Companion and then raised them in prayer. "O Allah,
grant forgiveness to Abu Salama; elevate him among those who are near to You;
take charge of his family at all times; forgive us and him, O Lord of the
worlds; make his grave spacious for him and fill it with light. Amin."
Once again Umm Salama was alone, only
now she had not one child, but several. There was no one to look after her and
them. Recalling what her husband had told her while she was looking after him,
she repeated the dua'a that he had remembered: "Inna lillahi wa inna ilayhi
raji'un!" "Surely we come from Allah and surely to Him we return!" she repeated.
"O Lord, reward me for my affliction and give me something better than it in
return, which only You, the Exalted and Mighty, can give." Then she thought to
herself, "What Muslim is better than Abu Salama whose family was the first to
emigrate to the Messenger of Allah?" All the Muslims in Medina were aware of Umm
Salama's situation, and when her idda period of four months and ten days were
over, Abu Bakr proposed marriage to her, but she refused. Then Umar asked her to
marry him, but again she refused. Then the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah
be upon him) himself asked for her hand in marriage. "O Messenger of Allah," Umm
Salama replied, "I have three main characteristics: I am a woman who is
extremely jealous and I am afraid that you will see something in me that will
make you angry and cause Allah to punish me; I am a woman who is already
advanced in age; and I am a woman who has many children."
"As for your jealousy," answered the
Prophet, "I pray to Allah the Almighty to take it away from you. As for your
age, I am older than you. As for your many children, they belong to Allah and
His Messenger."
The Prophet's answered eased her heart,
and so they were married in Shawwal, 4 AH, and so it was that Allah answered the
prayer of Umm Salama and gave her better than Abu Salama. From that day on, Umm
Salama was not only the mother of Salama, but also became the 'Mother of the
Believers' 'Umm al Muminin'.
Umm Salama was not the only wife to
have been widowed as a result of the battle of Uhud, and thanks to this
marriage, many of the Companions followed the Prophet's example, marrying widows
and thereby bringing them and their children into the circle of their families,
instead of leaving them to struggle on their own.
A'isha said, "When the Messenger of
Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) married Umm Salama, I felt very
unhappy when he mentioned her beauty to us. I waited until I saw her and she was
even more beautiful than her description." She was also from a very noble family
and known for her keen intelligence. On more than one occasion, the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) asked her advice in tricky
situations.
Like A'isha and Hafsa, Umm Salama
learned the whole of the Qur'an by heart, and an indication of her high station
with Allah can be found in the fact that she was permitted to see the angel
Jibril in human form: It has been related by Salman that Jibril came to the
Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) while Umm Salama
was with him, and had a conversation with him. After Jibril had left, the
Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said to Umm Salama, "Do you
know who that was?" and she replied that it was a man called Dihya al Khalbi.
"By Allah," said Umm Salama, "I didn't think it was anyone else until the
Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) told me who it
really was."
She also had a home for her four
children: Salama, Umar, Zaynab, and Durra who ere the foster children of the
Prophet. Once she was with the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon
him) with her daughter Zaynab when Fatima came with al Hasan and al Husayn. He
embraced his two grandsons and said, "may the mercy and blessings of Allah be
upon you, People of the House. He is Praiseworthy, Glorious." Umm Salama began
to weep and the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him)
looked at her and asked tenderly, "Why are you weeping?" She replied, "O
Messenger of Allah, you singled them out and left me and my daughter!" He said,
"You and your daughter are among the People of the House." Her daughter Zaynab
grew up in the care of the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be
upon him) and become one of the most intelligent women of her time. Once Zaynab
came in while the Prophet was bathing and he splashed water in her face.
Afterwards face retained its youthfulness even into her old age.
Her son Salama later married Umama, the
daughter of Hamza, the martyred uncle of the Prophet. Umm Salama was married to
the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) for seven years until his
death in 10 AH and accompanied him on many of his expeditions: Hudaybiyya,
Khaybar, the Conquest of Mecca, the siege of Ta'if, the expedition against
Hawazin and Thaqif, and the Farewell Hajj. She continued to live for a long
time, outliving all the other wives of the Prophet, may Allah be pleased with
them, until she died in 61 AH, at the age of eighty four, may Allah be pleased
with her, and Abu Hurairah said the funeral prayer over her.
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