In Islamic tradition, Qitmir was the dog that guarded the People of the Cave and stood by them all through their long sleep.[1] [2] His name, Qitmir, in Arabic is the name of a small membrane on separating a date from its seed. He is sometimes called Ar-Raqim, although narrations identify that Ar-Raqim was the name of the cave, or the name of a "brass plate, or stone table".[3] [4]
He is regarded as one of the most important animals of Islam. In Tafsir Ibn Kathir, Ibn Jurayj described Qitmir as lying outside the door on his stomach with his front legs stretched out. He was also said to be either the hunting dog of one of the Companions of the Cave, which is the more accepted view, or the dog of the king’s chef, who accepted the Ashābul-Kahf's religious views, and brought Qitmir with him.[5]
In Al-Kahf, the following is mentioned:
Arab archaeologist Rafiq Al-Dajani entered the Cave of the Seven Sleepers in Al-Rajib in 1963, where he allegedly found seven graves, and part of a dog's skull on the door of the cave.[6]