Amina bint Wahb explained

Amna
Native Name Lang:ar
Birth Name:Amna bint Wahb
Birth Date: (66 BH)
Birth Place:Mecca, Hejaz, Arabia
Death Date:576–577 C.E. / 36 B.H. (Age 27)
Death Place:Al-Abwa', Tihamah, Hejaz
Resting Place:Al-Abwa
Children:Muhammad
Father:Wahb ibn Abd Manaf
Mother:Barrah bint Abd al-Uzza
Relatives:


Family:Banu Zuhrah (of Quraysh)
Known For:Mother of Muhammad

Amina bint Wahb ibn Abd Manaf al-Zuhriyya (Arabic: آمِنَة بِنْت وَهْب|translit=ʾĀmina bint Wahb,) was the mother of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.[1] She belonged to the Banu Zuhra tribe.

Early life and marriage

Aminah was born to Wahb ibn Abd Manaf and Barrah bint 'Abd al-'Uzzā ibn 'Uthmān ibn 'Abd al-Dār in Mecca. Her tribe, Quraysh, were said to be descendants of Ibrahim (Abraham) through his son Isma'il (Ishmael). Her ancestor Zuhrah was the elder brother of Qusayy ibn Kilab, an ancestor of Abdullah ibn Abdul-Muttalib, and the first Qurayshi custodian of the Kaaba. Abd al-Muttalib proposed the marriage of Abdullah, his youngest son, to Aminah. Some sources state that Aminah's father accepted the match; others say that it was Aminah's uncle, Wuhaib, who was serving as her guardian.[2] [3] The two were married soon after. Abdullah spent much of Aminah's pregnancy away from home as part of a merchant caravan and died of disease before the birth of his son in Medina.[4]

Birth of Muhammad and later years

See also: Mawlid and Muhammad in Mecca.

Three months after Abdullah's death, in 570–571 CE, Muhammad was born. As was tradition among all the great families at the time, Aminah sent Muhammad to live with a milk mother in the desert as a baby. The belief was that in the desert, one would learn self-discipline, nobility, and freedom. During this time, Muhammad was nursed by Halimah bint Abi Dhuayb, a poor Bedouin woman from the tribe of Banu Sa'ad, a branch of the Hawāzin.[5]

When Muhammad was six years old, he was reunited with Aminah, who took him to visit her relatives in Yathrib (later Medina). Upon their return to Mecca a month later, accompanied by her slave, Umm Ayman, Aminah fell ill. She died around the year 577 or 578,[6] [7] and was buried in the village of Al-Abwa'. Her grave was destroyed in 1998.[8] [9] The young Muhammad was taken in first by his paternal grandfather, Abd al-Muttalib, in 577, and later by his paternal uncle Abu Talib ibn Abd al-Muttalib.

Religious belief

Islamic scholars have long been divided over the religious beliefs of Muhammad's parents and their fate in the afterlife.[10] One transmission by Abu Dawud and Ibn Majah states that God refused to forgive Aminah for her kufr (disbelief). Another transmission in Musnad al-Bazzar states that Muhammad's parents were brought back to life and accepted Islam before returning to the Barzakh. Some Ash'ari and Shafi'i scholars argued that neither would be punished in the afterlife as they were Ahl al-fatrah, or "people of the interval" between the prophetic messages of 'Isa (Jesus) and Muhammad.[11] The concept of Ahl al-fatrah is not universally accepted among Islamic scholars, and there is debate concerning the extent of salvation available for active practitioners of Shirk (Polytheism).[12] The majority of scholars have come to agree with it and disregard the ahadith stating that Muhammad's parents were condemned to Hell.

While a work attributed to Abu Hanifa, an early Sunni scholar, stated that both Aminah and Abdullah died condemned to Hell (Mata 'ala al-fitrah), some later authors of mawlid texts related a tradition in which Aminah and Abdullah were temporarily revived and embraced Islam. Scholars such as Ibn Taymiyya stated that this was a lie (though Al-Qurtubi stated that the concept did not disagree with Islamic theology). According to Ali al-Qari, the preferred view is that both the parents of Muhammad were Muslims. According to Al-Suyuti, Ismail Hakki Bursevi, and other Islamic scholars, all of the ahadith indicating that the parents of Muhammad were not forgiven were later abrogated when they were brought to life and accepted Islam. Shia Muslims believe that all of Muhammad's ancestors—Aminah included—were monotheists and therefore entitled to Paradise. A Shia tradition states that God forbade the fires of Hell from touching either of Muhammad's parents.[13]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Al-A'zami, Muhammad Mustafa . Muhammad Mustafa Al-A'zami . 2003 . The History of The Qur'anic Text: From Revelation to Compilation: A Comparative Study with the Old and New Testaments . 22–24 . UK Islamic Academy . 978-1-8725-3165-6.
  2. Book: Life of the Prophet . Muhammad Shibli Numani . M. Tayyib Bakhsh Badāyūnī . 148–150 . 1979 . Kazi Publications.
  3. Book: Life of Muhammad . Ibn Hisham . Ibn Ishaq . Ibn Ishaq . . . 1955 . 68–79.
  4. Ibn Sa'd/Haq pp. 107–108.
  5. Encyclopedia: Muhammad: Prophet of Islam . . 28 September 2009 . 28 September 2009.
  6. Book: Peters, F. E. . Muhammad and the Origins of Islam . . . 1994 . 0-7914-1876-6.
  7. Muhammad Ibn Sa'd's Kitab al-Tabaqat al-Kabir: Volume I, Pakistan Historical Society, page- 129.
  8. News: Shame of the House of Saud: Shadows over Mecca . https://web.archive.org/web/20160727080149/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/shame-of-the-house-of-saud-shadows-over-mecca-6103414.html . 2016-07-27 . limited . live . Daniel Howden . The Independent . 18 April 2006 . 5 November 2018.
  9. Web site: Ondrej Beranek . Pavel Tupek . From Visiting Graves to Their Destruction: The Question of Ziyara through the Eyes of Salafis . 2009 . . Waltham, Massachusetts, the U.S.A. . Crown Paper . 2 . 457230835.
  10. Book: Brown, Jonathan A.C. . Jonathan A.C. Brown . 2015 . Misquoting Muhammad: The Challenge and Choices of Interpreting the Prophet's Legacy . registration . Oneworld Publications . 188-189.
  11. Book: Holmes Katz, Marion . The Birth of The Prophet Muhammad: Devotional Piety in Sunni Islam . limited . 126-128 . . 2007 . 978-1-1359-8394-9.
  12. Book: Rida, Rashid . Tafsir al-Manar . 2:62 . 278–281 . 2018-11-06 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181105004004/http://shamela.ws/browse.php/book-12304#page-279 . 2018-11-05 . dead.
  13. Israel Oriental Studies . 1975 . 5 . Rubin . Uri . Pre-Existence and Light—Aspects of the Concept of Nur Muhammad . 75–88.