List of non-Arab Sahabah explained

Muhammad, the founder of Islam, was an Arab from the Banu Hashim of the Quraysh. During his time as a religious prophet in Arabia, the people who were physically in his presence as his closest friends and disciples are known as the Sahabah, many of whom were not from the Arabian tribes. The inclusion of non-Arab ethnicities among the Sahabah, and among the early Muslims as a whole, contributed to the definition of Islam's nature as a universal religion instead of an ethnic religion. The following is a list of non-Arab Sahabah during the 7th century.

Classical sources

Abyssinian

Persian

Roman

Copt (Egyptian)

Kurdish

Jewish

Assyrian

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Champions' of the True Faith, by Farid Adel, Section: Sumayyah bint Khayyat.
  2. Book: Jamal M. Ahmed, " Islam in the context of contemporary socio-religious thought of Africa ", Al-Abhath Quarterly Journal, vol. 20, no 2,juin 1967, p. 13-15.
  3. İbn Hâcer el-Askalanî, El İsabe fi Temyizi's Sahabe
  4. https://www.ufkumuzhaber.com/erciste-dogan-kiz-bebege-ilk-kurt-sahabenin-ismi-verildi-43351h.htm#:~:text=Zozan%20(sa)%20annemiz%2C%20%C4%B0slam,M%C3%BCsl%C3%BCman%20olan%20ilk%20K%C3%BCrt't%C3%BCr.