Imran ibn Husain explained

Religion:Islam
Imran ibn Husain
Imam
Birth Place:Mecca
Death Date:673
Death Place:Basra, Iraq
Other Names:Abu Nujayd
Era:Sahaba
Main Interests:Hadith, Fiqh

Imran ibn Husain ibn ‘Ubayd ibn Khalaf al-Khuzā’i (Arabic: عمران بن حُصَيْن) (d. 52 AH c. 673 CE in Basra, Iraq) was one of the Sahaba (Companions) of the Islamic Prophet Muhammad and a well-known reciter of the Quran, a Qadhi (Judge) and narrator of hadith.[1]

Biography

Imran ibn Husain and his father, Husain ibn Ubayd, both embraced Islam in the seventh year after hijra, following the Battle of Khaybar. He participated in several battles under the leadership of Muhammad, and he held the banner of his tribe, the Banū Khuzā‘ah amid the Conquest of Mecca. During the caliphate of Umar Ibn Al-Khattab, Imran was sent to Basra, to preside as a judge and instruct its inhabitants in Islamic jurisprudence and administer as lieutenant to governor Abu Musa Ashāri while he was away from Basra.[2] Hasan Al-Basri and Ibn Sirin said of him, "No one of Rasulullah’s Companions who entered Basra can be considered better than Imran Ibn Husain."[3]

During the First Fitna (literally “trial”) period of dissension and civil war (656-661) between Imam Ali Ibn Abu Talib and Muawiyah I, Imran did not just hold a neutral position, but appealed to people to abstain from violence. Imran is recorded as having said, "I would prefer to be a shepherd on top of a mountain till I die rather than shoot an arrow at anyone in either party, right or wrong." Any Muslim he encountered, Imran would advise them by saying, "Keep to your mosque. If it is broken into forcefully, then keep indoors. If the doors are broken into forcefully by someone who aims at taking your life and wealth, then fight him."[4]

Miracles

One of the miracles (kiramāt) that is widely related in traditional Islamic sources is that ‘Imran was able to hear the angels’ returning salutations to him (at the end of each ritual prayer) until he was cauterized. Thereafter he no longer heard their greetings until God later restored [that favor] to him.[5]

Views

included him in a list of Sahaba who deemed Nikah Mut'ah (temporary marriage) to be legal.[6]

Legacy

Among the hadith he narrated are:

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Imran ibn Hussain . 2016-10-19 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170202003919/http://quran-the-truth.blogspot.com/2013/12/know-your-ancestors-1-imran-ibn-hussain.html . 2017-02-02 . dead .
  2. https://archive.org/stream/originsoftheisla032520mbp/originsoftheisla032520mbp_djvu.txt “The Origins of the Islamic State”
  3. http://www.islamweb.net/emainpage/index.php?page=showfatwa&Option=FatwaId&Id=292123 Contributions of Imran ibn Husain
  4. http://sohabih.blogspot.com/2016/07/imran-ibn-husain-ra-angel-resemblance.html Imran ibn Husain - Angel of Resemblance
  5. Renard, John, (2009) Tales of God’s Friends: Islamic Hagiography in Translation, University of California Press, p. 5-
  6. [Al-Muhalla]