Qur'an, Hadith and Scholars: Abu Hurayrah: Difference between revisions
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===Bukhari 6452 :=== | ===Bukhari 6452 :=== | ||
{{Quote|{{Bukhari|8|76|459}}| | {{Quote|{{Bukhari|8|76|459}}|Narrated Abu Huraira: | ||
By Allah except Whom none has the right to- be worshipped, (sometimes) I used to lay (sleep) on the ground on my liver (abdomen) because of hunger, and (sometimes) I used to bind a stone over my belly because of hunger. One day I sat by the way from where they (the Prophet (ﷺ) and his companions) used to come out. When Abu Bakr passed by, I asked him about a Verse from Allah's Book and I asked him only that he might satisfy my hunger, but he passed by and did not do so. Then `Umar passed by me and I asked him about a Verse from Allah's Book, and I asked him only that he might satisfy my hunger, but he passed by without doing so. Finally Abu-l-Qasim (the Prophet (ﷺ) ) passed by me and he smiled when he saw me, for he knew what was in my heart and on my face. He said, "O Aba Hirr (Abu Huraira)!" I replied, "Labbaik, O Allah's Messenger (ﷺ)!" He said to me, "Follow me." He left and I followed him. Then he entered the house and I asked permission to enter and was admitted. He found milk in a bowl and said, "From where is this milk?" They said, "It has been presented to you by such-and-such man (or by such and such woman)." He said, "O Aba Hirr!" I said, "Labbaik, O Allah's Messenger (ﷺ)!" He said, "Go and call the people of Suffa to me." These people of Suffa were the guests of Islam who had no families, nor money, nor anybody to depend upon, and whenever an object of charity was brought to the Prophet, he would send it to them and would not take anything from it, and whenever any present was given to him, he used to send some for them and take some of it for himself. The order of the Prophet upset me, and I said to myself, "How will this little milk be enough for the people of As- Suffa? though I was more entitled to drink from that milk in order to strengthen myself", but behold! The Prophet (ﷺ) came to order me to give that milk to them. I wondered what will remain of that milk for me, but anyway, I could not but obey Allah and His Apostle so I went to the people of As-Suffa and called them, and they came and asked the Prophet's permission to enter. They were admitted and took their seats in the house. The Prophet (ﷺ) said, "O Aba-Hirr!" I said, "Labbaik, O Allah's Messenger (ﷺ)!" He said, "Take it and give it to them." So I took the bowl (of milk) and started giving it to one man who would drink his fill and return it to me, whereupon I would give it to another man who, in his turn, would drink his fill and return it to me, and I would then offer it to another man who would drink his fill and return it to me. Finally, after the whole group had drunk their fill, I reached the Prophet (ﷺ) who took the bowl and put it on his hand, looked at me and smiled and said. "O Aba Hirr!" I replied, "Labbaik, O Allah's Messenger (ﷺ)!" He said, "There remain you and I." I said, "You have said the truth, O Allah's Messenger (ﷺ)!" He said, "Sit down and drink." I sat down and drank. He said, "Drink," and I drank. He kept on telling me repeatedly to drink, till I said, "No. by Allah Who sent you with the Truth, I have no space for it (in my stomach)." He said, "Hand it over to me." When I gave him the bowl, he praised Allah and pronounced Allah's Name on it and drank the remaining milk.}} | |||
====Commentary :==== | ====Commentary :==== | ||
'''Ahl as-Suffah (أهل الصفة)''' : litteraly, the people of the banquet. They soujerned permantently about the prophets mosque and sheltered under a canopy. | '''Ahl as-Suffah (أهل الصفة)''' : litteraly, the people of the banquet. They soujerned permantently about the prophets mosque and sheltered under a canopy. | ||
Verse 273 of surah number two al-Baqarah | Verse 273 of surah number two al-Baqarah may make an allusion to them: | ||
{{Quote|{{Quran|2|273}}| | {{Quote|{{Quran|2|273}}|[Charity is] for the poor who have been restricted for the cause of Allah, unable to move about in the land. An ignorant [person] would think them self-sufficient because of their restraint, but you will know them by their [characteristic] sign. They do not ask people persistently [or at all]. And whatever you spend of good - indeed, Allah is Knowing of it. | ||
}} | |||
===Bukhari 7324 :=== | ===Bukhari 7324 :=== | ||
{{Quote|{{Bukhari|9|92|425}}| | {{Quote|{{Bukhari|9|92|425}}|Narrated Muhammad: | ||
We were with Abu Huraira while he was wearing two linen garments dyed with red clay. He cleaned his nose with his garment, saying, "Bravo! Bravo! Abu Huraira is cleaning his nose with linen! There came a time when I would fall senseless between the pulpit of Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) and `Aisha's dwelling whereupon a passerby would come and put his foot on my neck, considering me a mad man, but in fact, I had no madness, I suffered nothing but hunger."}} | |||
During the course of the last four years of the life of the prophet when according to the tradition he had total, uncontested power in Medinah, it is difficult to imagine someone daring to step upon the neck of a true companion of the prophet in broad daylight...it seems possible that Abu Hourayra didn't habitually accompany the prophet but ratherbut rather stay in or around the mosque of Madinah in the day, and homeless under the stars at night, amongst the "Suffah." In such a position he might well have seen the power that religion has in those times in that place. The opportunities afforded by religion would have been apparent. | During the course of the last four years of the life of the prophet when according to the tradition he had total, uncontested power in Medinah, it is difficult to imagine someone daring to step upon the neck of a true companion of the prophet in broad daylight...it seems possible that Abu Hourayra didn't habitually accompany the prophet but ratherbut rather stay in or around the mosque of Madinah in the day, and homeless under the stars at night, amongst the "Suffah." In such a position he might well have seen the power that religion has in those times in that place. The opportunities afforded by religion would have been apparent. | ||
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===Muslim 6399 (2493) :=== | ===Muslim 6399 (2493) :=== | ||
{{Quote|{{Muslim|31|6085}}|A'isha | {{Quote|{{Muslim|31|6085}}|'A'isha reported: | ||
Don't you feel surprised at Abu Huraira? He came (one day) and sat beside the nook of my apartment and began to narrate (the hadith of Allah's Apostle). I was hearing while I was engaged in extolling Allah (reciting Subhan Allah) constantly. He stood up before I finished my repetition of Subhan Allah. if I were to meet him I would have warned him in stern words that Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) did not speak so quickly as you talk. | |||
}}(See also Muslim 7509 (2493) et 7510 (3004) and Bukhari 3568) | |||
===Ahmad dans al-Mousnad (16/563) :=== | ===Ahmad dans al-Mousnad (16/563) :=== | ||
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===Muslim 6397 (2492)=== | ===Muslim 6397 (2492)=== | ||
{{Quote|{{Muslim|31|6083}}|Al-A'raj | {{Quote|{{Muslim|31|6083}}|Al-A'raj reported that he heard Abu Huraira as saying: | ||
You are under the impression that Abu Huraira transmits so many ahadith from Allah's Messenger (may peace up upon him) ; (bear in mind) Allah is the great Reckoner. I was a poor man and I served Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) being satisfied with bare subsistence, whereas the immigrants remained busy with transactions in the bazar; while the Ansar had been engaged in looking after their properties. (He further reported) that Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) said: He who spreads the cloth would not forget anything that he would hear from me. I spread my cloth until he narrated something. I then pressed it against my (chest), so I never forgot anything that I heard from him.}} | |||
(see also Bukhari 118,119, 3648, 7354, 2047 and 2350) | (see also Bukhari 118,119, 3648, 7354, 2047 and 2350) | ||
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===Bukhari 5355 :=== | ===Bukhari 5355 :=== | ||
{{Quote|{{Bukhari|7|64|268}}| | {{Quote|{{Bukhari|7|64|268}}|Narrated Abu Huraira: | ||
"The Prophet (ﷺ) said, 'The best alms is that which is given when one is rich, and a giving hand is better than a taking one, and you should start first to support your dependents.' A wife says, 'You should either provide me with food or divorce me.' A slave says, 'Give me food and enjoy my service." A son says, "Give me food; to whom do you leave me?" The people said, "O Abu Huraira! Did you hear that from Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) ?" He said, "No, it is from my own self."}} | |||
===Muslim 2589 (1109)=== | ===Muslim 2589 (1109)=== | ||
{{Quote|{{Muslim|6|2451}}|Abu Bakr ( | {{Quote|{{Muslim|6|2451}}|Abu Bakr (he is Abu Bakr b. Abd al-Rahman b. Harith) reported: | ||
I heard Abu Huraira (Allah be pleased with him) narrating that he who is overtaken by dawn in a state of seminal emission should not observe fast. I made a mention of it to 'Abd al-Rahman b. Harith (i. e. to his father) but he denied it. 'Abd al-Rahman went and I also went along with him till we came to'A'isha and Umm Salama (Allah be pleased with both of them) and Abd al-Rahman asked them about it. Both of them said: (At times it so happened) that the Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) woke up in the morning in a state of junub (but without seminal emission in a dream) and observed fast He (the narrator) said: We then proceeded till we went to Marwan and Abd al-Rahman made a mention of it to him. Upon this Marwan said: I stress upon you (with an oath) that you better go to Abu Huraira and refer to him what is said about it. So we came to Abu Huraira and Abu Bakr had been with us throughout and 'Abd al-Rahman made a mention of it to him, whereupon Abu Huraira said: Did they (the two wives of the Holy Prophet) tell you this? He replied: Yes Upon this (Abu Huraira) said: They have better knowledge. Abu Huraira then attributed that what was said about it to Fadl b. 'Abbas and said: I heard it from Fadl and not from the Messenger of Allah (ﷺ). Abu Huraira then retracted from what he used to say about it. Ibn Juraij (one of the narrators) reported: I asked 'Abd al-Malik, if they (the two wives) said (made the statement) in regard to Ramadan, whereupon he said: It was so, and he (the Holy Prophet) (woke up in the) morning in a state of junub which was not due to the wet dream and then observed fast.}} | |||
==His Use and Occasional Inconvienence to the Caliphates== | ==His Use and Occasional Inconvienence to the Caliphates== | ||
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The Prophet (ﷺ) said, "Every day two angels come down from Heaven and one of them says, '''«'O Allah! Compensate every person who spends in Your Cause,' and the other (angel) says, 'O Allah! Destroy every miser.'»'''}} | The Prophet (ﷺ) said, "Every day two angels come down from Heaven and one of them says, '''«'O Allah! Compensate every person who spends in Your Cause,' and the other (angel) says, 'O Allah! Destroy every miser.'»'''}} | ||
====Bukhari 2548 | ====Bukhari 2548 and 2549 :==== | ||
{{Quote|{{Bukhari|3|46|724}}| | {{Quote|{{Bukhari|3|46|724}}|Narrated Abu Huraira: | ||
Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) said, "A pious slave gets a double reward." Abu Huraira added: By Him in Whose Hands my soul is but for Jihad (i.e. holy battles), Hajj, and my duty to serve my mother, I would have loved to die as a slave.}} | |||
====Abu Dawud 2175 :==== | ====Abu Dawud 2175 :==== |
Revision as of 08:41, 20 February 2022
'Abd al-Rahman ibn Sakhr ad-Dawsi (Arabic : عبدالرحمن بن صخر الدوسي), or Abu Hurayra, born between 601 and 604 and died between 676 and 679, is a celebrated sahabi, or companion of the prophet Mohammed. It is estimated that he transmited 5,374 hadiths, smore or less the equivalent of an entire Qu'ran by itself. He is cited in more more than half of the classic isnâds (chains of transmission) of the hadiths, making him the greatest know traditionalist (muhaddith). He is therefore responsible for transmitting more hadiths than any other companion of the prophet according to the tradition, even though according to this same tradition he spent less time around Muhammad and was less intimitely familiar with him than the other companions. In affect, according the majority of authors, he only knew Muhammad during the latter part of his life: at most he knew the prophet for 4 years before the latter's death.
He was very poor during the life of the prophet, but he became the governor of Bahrain during the reign of ‘Umar Ibn al-Khattâb, he subsequently abandonded the post then became emir of Medina under the caliphate of Mu’âwiya.
Place of Abu Hurayrah amongst the Companions of the Prophet During his Lifetime
Bukhari 5432 (et 3708) :
Thirmidhi 3764 :
Bukhari 5375 :
Bukhari 6452 :
Commentary :
Ahl as-Suffah (أهل الصفة) : litteraly, the people of the banquet. They soujerned permantently about the prophets mosque and sheltered under a canopy.
Verse 273 of surah number two al-Baqarah may make an allusion to them:
Bukhari 7324 :
During the course of the last four years of the life of the prophet when according to the tradition he had total, uncontested power in Medinah, it is difficult to imagine someone daring to step upon the neck of a true companion of the prophet in broad daylight...it seems possible that Abu Hourayra didn't habitually accompany the prophet but ratherbut rather stay in or around the mosque of Madinah in the day, and homeless under the stars at night, amongst the "Suffah." In such a position he might well have seen the power that religion has in those times in that place. The opportunities afforded by religion would have been apparent.
Judged as too Gossipy during the Lifetime of the Prophet, but explained thanks to a magic coat.
If one takes into account that he supposedly transmitted more than 5000 hadiths in the space of four years, that works our to collectively about 4 hadith per day, a startling piece of statistical evidence. Even more confusing : according to numerous sources, during these 4 years, in total he could only have known the prophet for a year and nine months since the prophet sent him under the command of ibn Al Hadhrami to Bahrain. The messenger of Allah died while Abu Hurayrah was still there in Bahrain (Abou Houreyra : Mahmoud Abou Ar Riya Al Misri, Commentaires des Hadiths, de Ibn Koteyba, page 39 et 41). But also because the prophet has spent a great amounts of his time in military expiditions during the last 4 years of his life it is unlikely that Abu Hurayrah spent even 1 year and 9 months around him. Numerous contemporaries of Abu Hurayrah expressed their astonishment if not their doubts concerning this profusion of hadith traditions which seemed to pour out of Abu Hurayrah like bullets from a machine gun .
Muslim 6399 (2493) :
Don't you feel surprised at Abu Huraira? He came (one day) and sat beside the nook of my apartment and began to narrate (the hadith of Allah's Apostle). I was hearing while I was engaged in extolling Allah (reciting Subhan Allah) constantly. He stood up before I finished my repetition of Subhan Allah. if I were to meet him I would have warned him in stern words that Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) did not speak so quickly as you talk.
(See also Muslim 7509 (2493) et 7510 (3004) and Bukhari 3568)
Ahmad dans al-Mousnad (16/563) :
- « If I recounted to you all that I have understood from the prophet (peace and prayers of Allah be upon him) you would qualify me as a "collector of anything that comes my way" and you would discuss nothing more with me. »
Muslim 6397 (2492)
(see also Bukhari 118,119, 3648, 7354, 2047 and 2350)
Suspicion that he Invented Hadiths
Bukhari 5355 :
Muslim 2589 (1109)
His Use and Occasional Inconvienence to the Caliphates
While he was impoverished during the life of the prophet, Abu Hurayrah managed to considerably enriched himself during the reigns of the first caliphs. More than one time, he was designated the emir of Madinah. He continued to narrate hadiths throughout his life, but not everyone seemed pleased by his narrations: 'Umar threatened him to shut him up while Mu’âwiya found it easier to purchase his silence.
Tarik Madinat Dimachk d’Ibn Assadir Vol 67 p 343
Ibn Asâkir (Ta’rikh Dimashq), Ibn Kathir (Al-Bidaya wa l-Nihâya), Al Dhahabî (Siyar A’lâmi al Nubalâ)
Bukhari 120 + Ibn Hajar al-’Asqalanî (Fath al-Bari)
I have memorized two kinds of knowledge from Allah's Messenger (ﷺ). I have propagated one of them to you and if I propagated the second, then my pharynx (throat) would be cut (i.e. killed).
Ibn Hajar al-‘Asqalanî (Fath al-Bari) explains the previous hadith in these terms : « The scholars have deduced that the jar that he did not divulge contains some hadiths with the names of the governors of the Mal, ltheir state and their time period. Abû Hurayra made the same indirect reference to certain ones amongst them, because because he was afraid for himself. »
Ibn Sa’d al-Baghdadi Kitab al-Tabaqât al Kabîr :
Abu Hurayrah finished his life immensly wealthy, the governor of Medinah living in a palace. In the service of the first caliphs and in particular the Umayyads, he very effecitvely collaboreted and ingratiated himself with the founders of today's current Sunni islam, a venture which served to make him immensly rich and powerful.
Examples of Hadiths in the Pure Style of Abu Hurayrah
Some Hadiths Which Were Favored by the Caliphate:
Bukhari 6924 :
Bukhari 1442 :
Bukhari 2548 and 2549 :
Abu Dawud 2175 :
Others concerning good morals:
Bukhari 5185 :
Bukhari 5136 et Muslim 1419 :
Bukhari 1088 et muslim 1339 :
Bukhari 5194 :
(see also Muslim 1436)
Tirmidhi 1159 :
Muslim 5661 :
Other hadiths:
Muslim 6580 :
Bukhari 3295 :
Bukhari 608 :
Bukhari 3320 :
Bukhari 278 :
Bukhari 279 :
Bukhari 3292 :
Bukhari 3860 :
Muslim 6924 :
Bukhari 3056 :
Bukhari 1145 :
This last hadith, like much else in the tradition, seems to imply a flat earth that does not turn.