Fatimah bint
Muhammad
BACK
Fatimah
was the fifth child of Muhammad and Khadijah. She was born at a
time when her noble father had begun to spend long periods in the
solitude of mountains around Makkah, meditating and reflecting on
the great mysteries of creation.
This
was the time, before the Bithah, when her eldest sister Zaynab was
married to her cousin, al-Aas ibn ar Rabiah. Then followed the marriage
of her two other sisters, Ruqayyah and Umm Kulthum, to the sons
of Abu Lahab, a paternal uncle of the Prophet. Both Abu Lahab and
his wife Umm Jamil turned out to be flaming enemies of the Prophet
from the very beginning of his public mission.
The
little Fatimah thus saw her sisters leave home one after the other
to live with their husbands. She was too young to understand the
meaning of marriage and the reasons why her sisters had to leave
home. She loved them dearly and was sad and lonely when they left.
It is said that a certain silence and painful sadness came over
her then.
Of
course, even after the marriage of her sisters, she was not alone
in the house of her parents. Barakah, the maid-servant of Aminah,
the Prophet's mother, who had been with the Prophet since his birth,
Zayd ibn Harithah, and Ali, the young son of Abu Talib were all
part of Muhammad's household at this time. And of course there was
her loving mother, the lady Khadijah.
In
her mother and in Barakah, Fatimah found a great deal of solace
and comfort in Ali, who was about two years older than she, she
found a "brother" and a friend who somehow took the place
of her own brother al-Qasim who had died in his infancy. Her other
brother Abdullah, known as the Good and the Pure, who was born after
her, also died in his infancy. However in none of the people in
her father's household did Fatimah find the carefree joy and happiness
which she enjoyed with her sisters. She was an unusually sensitive
child for her age.
When
she was five, she heard that her father had become Rasul Allah,
the Messenger of God. His first task was to convey the good news
of Islam to his family and close relations. They were to worship
God Almighty alone. Her mother, who was a tower of strength and
support, explained to Fatimah what her father had to do. From this
time on, she became more closely attached to him and felt a deep
and abiding love for him. Often she would be at Iris side walking
through the narrow streets and alleys of Makkah, visiting the Kabah
or attending secret gatherings off, the early Muslims who had accepted
Islam and pledged allegiance to the Prophet.
One
day, when she was not yet ten, she accompanied her father to the
Masjid al-Haram. He stood in the place known as al-Hijr facing the
Kabah and began to pray. Fatimah stood at his side. A group of Quraysh,
by no means well-disposed to the Prophet, gathered about him. They
included Abu Jahl ibn Hisham, the Prophet's uncle, Uqbah ibn Abi
Muayt, Umayyah ibn Khalaf, and Shaybah and Utbah, sons of Rabi'ah.
Menacingly, the group went up to the Prophet and Abu Jahl, the ringleader,
asked:
"Which
of you can bring the entrails of a slaughtered animal and throw
it on Muhammad?"
Uqbah
ibn Abi Muayt, one of the vilest of the lot, volunteered and hurried
off. He returned with the obnoxious filth and threw it on the shoulders
of the Prophet, may God bless him and grant him peace, while he
was still prostrating. Abdullah ibn Masud, a companion of the Prophet,
was present but he was powerless to do or say anything.
Imagine
the feelings of Fatimah as she saw her father being treated in this
fashion. What could she, a girl not ten years old, do? She went
up to her father and removed the offensive matter and then stood
firmly and angrily before the group of Quraysh thugs and lashed
out against them. Not a single word did they say to her. The noble
Prophet raised his head on completion of the prostration and went
on to complete the Salat. He then said: "O Lord, may you punish
the Quraysh!" and repeated this imprecation three times. Then
he continued:
"May
You punish Utbah, Uqbah, Abu Jahl and Shaybah." (These whom
he named were all killed many years later at the Battle of Badr)
On
another occasion, Fatimah was with the Prophet as he made; tawaf
around the Kabah. A Quraysh mob gathered around him. They seized
him and tried to strangle him with his own clothes. Fatimah screamed
and shouted for help. Abu Bakr rushed to the scene and managed to
free the Prophet. While he was doing so, he pleaded: "Would
you kill a man who says, 'My Lord is God?'" Far from giving
up, the mob turned on Abu Bakr and began beating him until blood
flowed from his head and face.
Such
scenes of vicious opposition and harassment against her father and
the early Muslims were witnessed by the young Fatimah. She did not
meekly stand aside but joined in the struggle in defence of her
father and his noble mission. She was still a young girl and instead
of the cheerful romping, the gaiety and liveliness which children
of her age are and should normally be accustomed to, Fatimah had
to witness and participate in such ordeals.
Of
course, she was not alone in this. The whole of the Prophet's family
suffered from the violent and mindless Quraysh. Her sisters, Ruqayyah
and Umm Kulthum also suffered. They were living at this time in
the very nest of hatred and intrigue against the Prophet. Their
husbands were Utbah and Utaybah, sons of Abu Lahab and Umm Jamil.
Umm Jamil was known to be a hard and harsh woman who had a sharp
and evil tongue. It was mainly because of her that Khadijah was
not pleased with the marriages of her daughters to Umm Jamil's sons
in the first place. It must have been painful for Ruqayyah and Umm
Kulthum to be living in the household of such inveterate enemies
who not only joined but led the campaign against their father.
As
a mark of disgrace to Muhammad and his family, Utbah and Utaybah
were prevailed upon by their parents to divorce their wives. This
was part of the process of ostracizing the Prophet totally. The
Prophet in fact welcomed his daughters back to his home with joy,
happiness and relief.
Fatimah,
no doubt, must have been happy to be with her sisters once again.
They all wished that their eldest sister, Zaynab, would also be
divorced by her husband. In fact, the Quraysh brought pressure on
Abu-l Aas to do so but he refused. When the Quraysh leaders came
up to him and promised him the richest and most beautiful woman
as a wife should he divorce Zaynab, he replied:
"I
love my wife deeply and passionately and I have a great and high
esteem for her father even though I have not entered the religion
of Islam."
Both
Ruqayyah and Umm Kulthum were happy to be back with their loving
parents and to be rid of the unbearable mental torture to which
they had been subjected in the house of Umm Jamil. Shortly afterwards,
Ruqayyah married again, to the young and shy Uthman ibn Allan who
was among the first to have accepted Islam. They both left for Abyssinia
among the first muhajirin who sought refuge in that land and stayed
there for several years. Fatimah was not to see Ruqayyah again until
after their mother had died.
The
persecution of the Prophet, his family and his followers continued
and even became worse after the migration of the first Muslims to
Abyssinia. In about the seventh year of his mission, the Prophet
and his family were forced to leave their homes and seek refuge
in a rugged little valley enclosed by hills on all sides and defile,
which could only be entered from Makkah by a narrow path.
To
this arid valley, Muhammad and the clans of Banu Hashim and al-Muttalib
were forced to retire with limited supplies of food. Fatimah was
one of the youngest members of the clans -just about twelve years
old - and had to undergo months of hardship and suffering. The wailing
of hungry children and women in the valley could be heard from Makkah.
The Quraysh allowed no food and contact with the Muslims whose hardship
was only relieved somewhat during the season of pilgrimage. The
boycott lasted for three years. When it was lifted, the Prophet
had to face even more trials and difficulties. Khadijah, the faithful
and loving, died shortly afterwards. With her death, the Prophet
and his family lost one of the greatest sources of comfort and strength
which had sustained them through the difficult period. The year
in which the noble Khadijah, and later Abu Talib, died is known
as the Year of Sadness. Fatimah, now a young lady, was greatly distressed
by her mother's death. She wept bitterly and for some time was so
grief-striken that her health deteriorated. It was even feared she
might die of grief.
Although
her older sister, Umm Kulthum, stayed in the same household, Fatimah
realized that she now had a greater responsibility with the passing
away of her mother. She felt that she had to give even greater support
to her father. With loving tenderness, she devoted herself to looking
after his needs. So concerned was she for his welfare that she came
to be called "Umm Abi-ha the mother of her father". She
also provided him with solace and comfort during times of trial,
difficulty and crisis.
Often
the trials were too much for her. Once, about this time, an insolent
mob heaped dust and earth upon his gracious head. As he entered
his home, Fatimah wept profusely as she wiped the dust from her
father's head.
"Do
not cry, my daughter," he said, "for God shall protect
your father." The Prophet had a special love for Fatimah. He
once said: "Whoever pleased Fatimah has indeed pleased God
and whoever has caused her to be angry has indeed angered God. Fatimah
is a part of me. Whatever pleases her pleases me and whatever angers
her angers me."
He
also said: "The best women in all the world are four: the Virgin
Mary, Aasiyaa the wife of Pharoah, Khadijah Mother of the Believers,
and Fatimah, daughter of Muhammad." Fatimah thus acquired a
place of love and esteem in the Prophet's heart that was only occupied
by his wife Khadijah.
Fatimah,
may God be pleased with her, was given the title of "az-Zahraa"
which means "the Resplendent One". That was because of
her beaming face which seemed to radiate light. It is said that
when she stood for Prayer, the mihrab would reflect the light of
her countenance. She was also called "al-Batul" because
of her asceticism. Instead of spending her time in the company of
women, much of her time would be spent in Salat, in reading the
Quran and in other acts of ibadah.
Fatimah
had a strong resemblance to her father, the Messenger of God. Aishah,
the wife of the Prophet, said of her: "I have not seen any
one of God's creation resemble the Messenger of God more in speech,
conversation and manner of sitting than Fatimah, may God be pleased
with her. When the Prophet saw her approaching, he would welcome
her, stand up and kiss her, take her by the hand and sit her down
in the place where he was sitting." She would do the same when
the Prophet came to her. She would stand up and welcome him with
joy and kiss him.
Fatimah's
fine manners and gentle speech were part of her lovely and endearing
personality. She was especially kind to poor and indigent folk and
would often give all the food she had to those in need even if she
herself remained hungry. She had no craving for the ornaments of
this world nor the luxury and comforts of life. She lived simply,
although on occasion as we shall see circumstances seemed to be
too much and too difficult for her.
She
inherited from her father a persuasive eloquence that was rooted
in wisdom. When she spoke, people would often be moved to tears.
She had the ability and the sincerity to stir the emotions, move
people to tears and fill their hearts with praise and gratitude
to God for His grace and His inestimable bounties.
Fatimah
migrated to Madinah a few weeks after the Prophet did. She went
with Zayd ibn Harithah who was sent by the Prophet back to Makkah
to bring the rest of his family. The party included Fatimah and
Umm Kulthum, Sawdah, the Prophet's wife, Zayd's wife Barakah and
her son Usamah. Travelling with the group also were Abdullah the
son of Abu Bakr who accompanied his mother and his sisters, Aishah
and Asma.
In
Madinah, Fatimah lived with her father in the simple dwelling he
had built adjoining the mosque. In the second year after the Hijrah,
she received proposals of marriage through her father, two of which
were turned down. Then Ali, the son of Abu Talib, plucked up courage
and went to the Prophet to ask for her hand in marriage. In the
presence of the Prophet, however, Ali became over-awed and tongue-tied.
He stared at the ground and could not say anything. The Prophet
then asked: "Why have you come? Do you need something?"
Ali still could not speak and then the Prophet suggested: "Perhaps
you have come to propose marriage to Fatimah."
"Yes,"
replied Ali. At this, according to one report, the Prophet said
simply: "Marhaban wa ahlan - Welcome into the family,"
and this was taken by Ali and a group of Ansar who were waiting
outside for him as indicating the Prophet's approval. Another report
indicated that the Prophet approved and went on to ask Ali if he
had anything to give as mahr. Ali replied that he didn't. The Prophet
reminded him that he had a shield which could be sold.
Ali
sold the shield to Uthman for four hundred dirhams and as he was
hurrying back to the Prophet to hand over the sum as mahr, Uthman
stopped him and said:
"I
am returning your shield to you as a present from me on your marriage
to Fatimah." Fatimah and Ali were thus married most probably
at the beginning of the second year after the Hijrah. She was about
nineteen years old at the time and Ali was about twenty one. The
Prophet himself performed the marriage ceremony. At the walimah,
the guests were served with dates, figs and hais ( a mixture of
dates and butter fat). A leading member of the Ansar donated a ram
and others made offerings of grain. All Madinah rejoiced.
On
her marriage, the Prophet is said to have presented Fatimah and
Ali with a wooden bed intertwined with palm leaves, a velvet coverlet,
a leather cushion filled with palm fibre, a sheepskin, a pot, a
waterskin and a quern for grinding grain.
Fatimah
left the home of her beloved father for the first time to begin
life with her husband. The Prophet was clearly anxious on her account
and sent Barakah with her should she be in need of any help. And
no doubt Barakah was a source of comfort and solace to her. The
Prophet prayed for them:
"O
Lord, bless them both, bless their house and bless their offspring."
In Ali's humble dwelling, there was only a sheepskin for a bed.
In the morning after the wedding night, the Prophet went to Ali's
house and knocked on the door.
Barakah
came out and the Prophet said to her: "O Umm Ayman, call my
brother for me."
"Your
brother? That's the one who married your daughter?" asked Barakah
somewhat incredulously as if to say: Why should the Prophet call
Ali his "brother"? (He referred to Ali as his brother
because just as pairs of Muslims were joined in brotherhood after
the Hijrah, so the Prophet and Ali were linked as "brothers".)
The
Prophet repeated what he had said in a louder voice. Ali came and
the Prophet made a du'a, invoking the blessings of God on him. Then
he asked for Fatimah. She came almost cringing with a mixture of
awe and shyness and the Prophet said to her:
"I
have married you to the dearest of my family to me." In this
way, he sought to reassure her. She was not starting life with a
complete stranger but with one who had grown up in the same household,
who was among the first to become a Muslim at a tender age, who
was known for his courage, bravery and virtue, and whom the Prophet
described as his "brother in this world and the hereafter".
Fatimah's
life with Ali was as simple and frugal as it was in her father's
household. In fact, so far as material comforts were concerned,
it was a life of hardship and deprivation. Throughout their life
together, Ali remained poor because he did not set great store by
material wealth. Fatimah was the only one of her sisters who was
not married to a wealthy man.
In
fact, it could be said that Fatimah's life with Ali was even more
rigorous than life in her father's home. At least before marriage,
there were always a number of ready helping hands in the Prophet's
household. But now she had to cope virtually on her own. To relieve
their extreme poverty, Ali worked as a drawer and carrier of water
and she as a grinder of corn. One day she said to Ali: "I have
ground until my hands are blistered."
"I
have drawn water until I have pains in my chest," said Ali
and went on to suggest to Fatimah: "God has given your father
some captives of war, so go and ask him to give you a servant."
Reluctantly,
she went to the Prophet who said: "What has brought you here,
my little daughter?" "I came to give you greetings of
peace," she said, for in awe of him she could not bring herself
to ask what she had intended.
"What
did you do?" asked Ali when she returned alone.
"I
was ashamed to ask him," she said. So the two of them went
together but the Prophet felt they were less in need than others.
"I
will not give to you," he said, "and let the Ahl as-Suffah
(poor Muslims who stayed in the mosque) be tormented with hunger.
I have not enough for their keep..."
Ali
and Fatimah returned home feeling somewhat dejected but that night,
after they had gone to bed, they heard the voice of the Prophet
asking permission to enter. Welcoming him, they both rose to their
feet, but he told them:
"Stay
where you are," and sat down beside them. "Shall I not
tell you of something better than that which you asked of me?"
he asked and when they said yes he said: "Words which Jibril
taught me, that you should say "Subhaan Allah- Glory be to
God" ten times after every Prayer, and ten times "AI hamdu
lillah - Praise be to God," and ten times "Allahu Akbar
- God is Great." And that when you go to bed you should say
them thirty-three times each."
Ali
used to say in later years: "I have never once failed to say
them since the Messenger of God taught them to us."
There
are many reports of the hard and difficult times which Fatimah had
to face. Often there was no food in her house. Once the Prophet
was hungry. He went to one after another of his wives' apartments
but there was no food. He then went to Fatimah's house and she had
no food either. When he eventually got some food, he sent two loaves
and a piece of meat to Fatimah. At another time, he went to the
house of Abu Ayyub al-Ansari and from the food he was given, he
saved some for her. Fatimah also knew that the Prophet was without
food for long periods and she in turn would take food to him when
she could. Once she took a piece of barley bread and he, said to
her: "This is the first food your father has eaten for three
days."
Through
these acts of kindness she showed how much she loved her father;
and he loved her, really loved her in return.
Once
he returned from a journey outside Madinah. He went to the mosque
first of all and prayed two rakats as was his custom. Then, as he
often did, he went to Fatimah's house before going to his wives.
Fatimah welcomed him and kissed his face, his mouth and his eyes
and cried. "Why do you cry?" the Prophet asked. "I
see you, O Rasul Allah," she said, "Your color is pale
and sallow and your clothes have become worn and shabby." "O
Fatimah," the Prophet replied tenderly, "don't cry for
Allah has sent your father with a mission which He would cause to
affect every house on the face of the earth whether it be in towns,
villages or tents (in the desert) bringing either glory or humiliation
until this mission is fulfilled just as night (inevitably) comes."
With such comments Fatimah was often taken from the harsh realities
of daily life to get a glimpse of the vast and far-reaching vistas
opened up by the mission entrusted to her noble father.
Fatimah
eventually returned to live in a house close to that of the Prophet.
The place was donated by an Ansari who knew that the Prophet would
rejoice in having his daughter as his neighbor. Together they shared
in the joys and the triumphs, the sorrows and the hardships of the
crowded and momentous Madinah days and years.
In
the middle of the second year after the Hijrah, her sister Ruqayyah
fell ill with fever and measles. This was shortly before the great
campaign of Badr. Uthman, her husband, stayed by her bedside and
missed the campaign. Ruqayyah died just before her father returned.
On his return to Madinah, one of the first acts of the Prophet was
to visit her grave.
Fatimah
went with him. This was the first bereavement they had suffered
within their closest family since the death of Khadijah. Fatimah
was greatly distressed by the loss of her sister. The tears poured
from her eyes as she sat beside her father at the edge of the grave,
and he comforted her and sought to dry her tears with the corner
of his cloak.
The
Prophet had previously spoken against lamentations for the dead,
but this had lead to a misunderstanding, and when they returned
from the cemetery the voice of Umar was heard raised in anger against
the women who were weeping for the martyrs of Badr and for Ruqayyah.
"Umar,
let them weep," he said and then added: "What comes from
the heart and from the eye, that is from God and His mercy, but
what comes from the hand and from the tongue, that is from Satan."
By the hand he meant the beating of breasts and the smiting of cheeks,
and by the tongue he meant the loud clamor in which women often
joined as a mark of public sympathy.
Uthman
later married the other daughter of the Prophet, Umm Kulthum, and
on this account came to be known as Dhu-n Nurayn - Possessor of
the Two Lights.
The
bereavement which the family suffered by the death of Ruqayyah was
followed by happiness when to the great joy of all the believers
Fatimah gave birth to a boy in Ramadan of the third year after the
Hijrah. The Prophet spoke the words of the Adhan into the ear of
the new-born babe and called him al-Hasan which means the Beautiful
One.
One
year later, she gave birth to another son who was called al-Husayn,
which means "little Hasan" or the little beautiful one.
Fatimah would often bring her two sons to see their grandfather
who was exceedingly fond of them. Later he would take them to the
Mosque and they would climb onto his back when he prostrated. He
did the same with his little granddaughter Umamah, the daughter
of Zaynab.
In
the eighth year after the Hijrah, Fatimah gave birth to a third
child, a girl whom she named after her eldest sister Zaynab who
had died shortly before her birth. This Zaynab was to grow up and
become famous as the "Heroine of Karbala". Fatimah's fourth
child was born in the year after the Hijrah. The child was also
a girl and Fatimah named her Umm Kulthum after her sister who had
died the year before after an illness.
It
was only through Fatimah that the progeny of the Prophet was perpetuated.
All the Prophet's male children had died in their infancy and the
two children of Zaynab named Ali and Umamah died young. Ruqayyah's
child Abdullah also died when he was not yet two years old. This
is an added reason for the reverence which is accorded to Fatimah.
Although
Fatimah was so often busy with pregnancies and giving birth and
rearing children, she took as much part as she could in the affairs
of the growing Muslim community of Madinah. Before her marriage,
she acted as a sort of hostess to the poor and destitute Ahl as-Suffah.
As soon as the Battle of Uhud was over, she went with other women
to the battlefield and wept over the dead martyrs and took time
to dress her father's wounds. At the Battle of the Ditch, she played
a major supportive role together with other women in preparing food
during the long and difficult siege. In her camp, she led the Muslim
women in prayer and on that place there stands a mosque named Masjid
Fatimah, one of seven mosques where the Muslims stood guard and
performed their devotions.
Fatimah
also accompanied the Prophet when he made Umrah in the sixth year
after the Hijrah after the Treaty of Hudaybiyyah. In the following
year, she and her sister Umm Kulthum, were among the mighty throng
of Muslims who took part with the Prophet in the liberation of Makkah.
It is said that on this occasion, both Fatimah and Umm Kulthum visited
the home of their mother Khadijah and recalled memories of their
childhood and memories of jihad, of long struggles in the early
years of the Prophet's mission.
In
Ramadan of the tenth year just before he went on his Farewell Pilgrimage,
the Prophet confided to Fatimah, as a secret not yet to be told
to others:
"Jibril
recited the Quran to me and I to him once every year, but this year
he has recited it with me twice. I cannot but think that my time
has come."
On
his return from the Farewell Pilgrimage, the Prophet did become
seriously ill. His final days were spent in the apartment of his
wife Aishah. When Fatimah came to visit him, Aishah would leave
father and daughter together.
One
day he summoned Fatimah. When she came, he kissed her and whispered
some words in her ear. She wept. Then again he whispered in her
ear and she smiled. Aishah saw and asked:
"You
cry and you laugh at the same time, Fatimah? What did the Messenger
of God say to you?" Fatimah replied:
"He
first told me that he would meet his Lord after a short while and
so I cried. Then he said to me: 'Don't cry for you will be the first
of my household to join me.' So I laughed."
Not
long afterwards the noble Prophet passed away. Fatimah was grief-striken
and she would often be seen weeping profusely. One of the companions
noted that he did not see Fatimah, may God be pleased with her,
laugh after the death of her father.
One
morning, early in the month of Ramadan, just less than five month
after her noble father had passed away, Fatimah woke up looking
unusually happy and full of mirth. In the afternoon of that day,
it is said that she called Salma bint Umays who was looking after
her. She asked for some water and had a bath. She then put on new
clothes and perfumed herself. She then asked Salma to put her bed
in the courtyard of the house. With her face looking to the heavens
above, she asked for her husband Ali.
He
was taken aback when he saw her lying in the middle of the courtyard
and asked her what was wrong. She smiled and said: "I have
an appointment today with the Messenger of God."
Ali
cried and she tried to console him. She told him to look after their
sons al-Hasan and al-Husayn and advised that she should be buried
without ceremony. She gazed upwards again, then closed her eyes
and surrendered her soul to the Mighty Creator.
She,
Fatimah the Resplendent One, was just twenty nine years old.
BACK
|