Bi ismillahir rahmanir raheem
assalamu alaikum
Mu'adh
ibn Jabal
From
the Alim Software
Narrated Mu'adh ibn Jabal:
When Allah's Messenger (peace be upon him) sent him to the Yemen,
he went out with him giving him advice, Mu'adh riding
and Allah's Messenger (peace be upon him) walking beside his riding
beast.
Then when he finished he said,
"Perhaps, Mu'adh, you may not meet me after
this year,
but perhaps, you may pass this mosque of mine
and my grave."
Mu'adh wept from grief over the departure of
Allah's Messenger (peace be upon him). The Prophet (peace be upon him)
then turned facing Medina and said,
"Those nearest to me are the pious, whoever
they are and whenever they are."
Narrated AbuHurairah:
Allah's Apostle (peace be upon him) said:
Don't nurse [a] grudge
and don't bid him out
for raising the price and
don't nurse
aversion or enmity
and don't enter into a transaction when
others have entered into that transaction
and be as
fellow-brothers and servants of Allah.
A Muslim is the brother
of a Muslim.
He neither oppresses him nor humiliates
him nor looks down upon him.
The piety is here,
(and while saying so) he pointed towards his chest thrice.
It is a serious evil for a Muslim
that he should look down
upon his brother Muslim.
All things of a Muslim are inviolable
for his brother in faith;
his blood, his wealth and his
honour.
About Mu'ad ibn Jabal, r.a.
Mu'adh ibn Jabal was a young man growing up in Yathrib [Medina today]
as the light of guidance and truth began to spread over the Arabian peninsula.
He was a handsome and imposing character with black eyes and curly hair
and immediately impressed whomever he met. He was already distinguished
for the sharpness of his intelligence among young men of his own age.
The young Mu'adh became a Muslim at the hands of Musab bin Umayr, the
daiy
(missionary) whom the Prophet had sent to Yathrib before the hijrah
[migration]. Mu'adh was among the 72 Yathribites who journeyed to Makkah
[Mecca] one year before the hijrah, and met the Prophet at his house
and later again in the valley of Mina, outside Makkah, at Aqabah. Here
the famous second Aqabah Pledge was made at which the new Muslims of Yathrib,
including some women, vowed to support and defend the Prophet at any cost.
Mu'adh was among those who enthusiastically clasped the hands of the blessed
Prophet then and pledged allegiance to him.
As soon as Mu'adh returned to Yathrib from Makkah, he and a few others
of his age formed a group to remove and destroy [the] idols from the houses
of the mushrikin [polytheists] in Yathrib. One of the effects of
this campaign was that a prominent man of the city, Amr bin al-Jumuh, became
a Muslim.
When the noble Prophet reached Yathrib, Mu'adh bin Jabal stayed in his
company as much as possible. He studied the Qur'an and the laws of Islam
until he became one of the most well-versed of all the companions in the
religion of Islam.
Wherever Mu'adh went, people would refer to him for legal judgments
on matters over which they differed. This is not strange since he was brought
up in the school of the Prophet himself and learnt as much as he could
from him. He was the best pupil of the best teacher. His knowledge bore
the stamp of authenticity. The best certificate that he could have received
came from the Prophet himself when he said, "The
most knowledgeable of my ummah [community] in matters of Halal
[permitted, allowed, lawful or legal] and Haram [forbidden] is Mu'adh
bin Jabal."
One of the greatest of Mu'adh's contributions to the ummah of
Muhammad was that he was one of the group of six who collected the Qur'an
during the lifetime of the Prophet, peace be upon him. Whenever a group
of companions met and Mu'adh was among them, they would look at him with
awe and respect on account of his knowledge. The Prophet and his two Khalifahs
after him placed this unique gift and power in the service of Islam .
After the liberation of Makkah, the Quraysh became Muslims en masse.
The Prophet immediately saw the need of the new Muslims for teachers to
instruct them in the fundamentals of Islam and to make them truly understand
the spirit and letter of its laws. He appointed Attab bin Usay as his deputy
in Makkah and he asked Mu'adh bin Jabal to stay with him and teach people
the Qur'an and instruct them in the religion.
Sometime after the Prophet had returned to Yathrib, messengers of the
kings of Yemen came to him announcing that they and the people of Yemen
had become Muslims. They requested that some teachers should be with them
to teach Islam to the people. For this task the Prophet commissioned a
group of competent duat (missionaries) and made Mu'adh bin Jabal
their amir. He then put the following question to Mu'adh:
"According to what will you judge?"
"According to the Book of God," replied Mu'adh.
"And if you find nothing therein?"
"According to the Sunnah of the Prophet of Gtd."
"And if you find nothing therein?"
"Then I will exert myself (exercise ijtihad) to form my own
judgment."
The Prophet was pleased with this reply and said: "Praise
be to God Who has guided the messenger of the Prophet to that which pleases
the Prophet."
The Prophet personally bade farewell to this mission of guidance
and light and walked for some distance alongside Mu'adh as he rode out
of the city. Finally he said to him: O Mu'adh,
perhaps you shall not meet me again after this year. Perhaps when you return
you shall see only my mosque and my grave." Mu'adh wept. Those
with him wept too. A feeling of sadness and desolation overtook him as
he parted from his beloved Prophet, peace and blessings of God be on him.
The Prophet's premonition was correct. The eyes of Mu'adh never beheld
the Prophet after that moment. The Prophet died before Mu'adh returned
from the Yemen. There is no doubt that Mu'adh wept when he returned to
Yathrib and found there was no longer the blessed company of the Prophet.
During the caliphate of Umar, Mu'adh was sent to the Banu Kitab to apportion
their stipends and to distribute the sadaqah [alms-giving] of
their richer folk among the poor. When he had done his duty, he returned
to his wife with his saddle blanket around his neck, empty handed, and
she asked him:
"Where are the gifts which [the] commissioners return with
for their families?" "I had an alert Supervisor who was checking over me,"
he replied. "You were a trusted person with the messenger of God and with
Abu Bakr. Then Umar came and he sent a supervisor with you to check on
you!' she exclaimed. She went on to talk about this to the women of Umar's
household and complained to them about it. The complaint eventually reached
Umar, so he summoned Mu'adh and said:
"Did I send a supervisor with you to check on you?"
"No, Amir al-Muminin," [commander of the Faithful] he said, "But
that was the only reason I could find to give her." Umar laughed and then
gave him a gift, saying, "I hope this pleases you."
Also during the caliphate of Umar, the governor of Syria, Yazid bin
Abu Sufyan sent a message saying: "O Amir al-Mumineen! The people
of Syria are many. They fill the towns. They need people to teach them
the Qur'an and instruct them in the religion."
Umar thereupon summoned five persons who had collected the Qur'an in the
lifetime of the Prophet, peace be upon him. They were Mu'adh bin Jabal,
Ubadah bin as-Samit, Abu Ayyub al-Ansari, Ubayy bin Kab and Abu al-Darda.
He said to them:
"Your brothers in Syria have asked me to help them by sending
those who can teach them the Qur'an and instruct them in the religion.
Please appoint three among you for this task and may God bless you. I can
select three of you myself if you do not want to put the matter to the
vote."
"Why should we vote?" they asked. "Abu Ayyub is quite old and Ubayy
is a sick man. That leaves three of us." "All three of you go to Homs first
of all. If you are satisfied with the condition of the people there, one
of you should stay there, another should go to Damascus and the other to
Palestine."
So it was that Ubadah bin as-Samit was left at Homs, Abu al-Darda went
to Damascus and Mu'adh went to Palestine. There Mu'adh fell ill with an
infectious disease. As he was near to death, he turned in the direction
of the Kabah and repeated this refrain: "Welcome Death, Welcome. A visitor
has come after a long absence . . ." And looking up to heaven, he said:
"O Lord, You know that I did not desire the world and to prolong my stay
in it . . . O Lord, accept my soul with goodness as You would accept a
believing soul..."
He then passed away, far from his family and his clan, a daiy in the
service of God and a muhajir in His path.
His tomb is at Ghor in the Jordan Valley. He died there 18 years
after the Hijra at the age of 38.
------------- Rasul Allah (sallah llahu alaihi wa sallam) said: "Whoever knows himself, knows his Lord" and whoever knows his Lord has been given His gnosis and nearness.
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