Marriages of the Holy
Prophet
When the Holy Prophet passed away, he left nine wives
behind. This has become a main target of the Christian and Jewish writers. They
say that plurality of marriage (polygamy) in itself points to avidity and to
yielding to lust and desire, and the Prophet was not content with four wives
which had been allowed to his Ummah but exceeded even that limit and married
nine women.
It is necessary to point out that this is not such a simple
matter to be dismissed in a sentence that he was inordinately fond of women, so
much so that he married nine wives. The fact is that he had married each one of
his wives for some particular reason due to particular circumstances.
His first marriage was with Khadijah. He lived with her
alone for twenty-five years. It was the prime time of his youth and
constitutes two-thirds of his married life. We have written about her on
the preceding pages.
Then he married Sawdah bint Zam'ah whose husband had expired
during the second migration to Abyssinia. Sawdah was a believing lady who had
migrated on account of her faith. Her father and brother were among the most
bitter enemies of Islam. If she were left to return to them, they would have
tortured and tormented her, as they were doing with other believing men and
women, oppressing and killing them, forcing them to renounce their faith.
At the same time, he married 'Ayishah bint Abu Bakr, who was
then a six-year old child. She came to the Prophet's house some time
after the migration to Medina.
Then he emigrated to Medina and began spreading the word of
Allah. Thereafter, he married eight women, all of them widows or divorcees, all
old or middle-aged. This continued for about eight years. It was only then
that he was prohibited by the Almighty from marrying any woman besides those
whom he had already married. Obviously, these happenings cannot be explained by
his love for women because both his early life and the later period contradict
such an assumption.
Just look at a man with a passion for women who is
infatuated with a carnal desire, enamored by female companionship, with a
sensual lust for them. You will find him attracted to their adornment, spending
his time in pursuit of beauty, infatuated with coquetry and flirtation and
craving for youth, tender age, and fresh complexion. But these peculiarities
are conspicuously absent in the Prophet's life. He married widows after having
married a virgin, old-aged ladies after having married young girls. Then
he offered his wives a choice to give them a good provision and allow them to
depart gracefully, i.e. divorce them if they desired this world and its
adornment. Alternatively, they should renounce the world and abstain from
adornments and embellishments if they desired Allah and His Prophet and the
latter abode. Look at this verse of the Qur'an:
O Prophet! Say to your wives: If you desire this world's life and its
ornature then come, l will give you a provision and allow you to depart a
graceful departure. And if you desire
Allah and His Messenger and the latter abode, then surely Allah has prepared
for the doers of good from among you a ,mighty reward. (Qur'an, 33:28-29)
Is this the attitude of a man infatuated with lust and
desire?! The fact is that we will have to look for reasons other than lust and
avidity for his plurality of wives:
·
He had married many of them in order to give them protection and safeguard their dignity.
·
It was hoped that the Muslims would follow his example
and provide protection to aged women, widows and their orphaned children.
Sawdah bint Zam'ah's marriage comes into this category.
Zainab bint Khuzaymah's husband, 'Abdullah ibn Jahsh (a cousin of the Prophet),
was martyred during the battle of Uhud (as stated above). This was the second
time she became a widow. She was one of the most generous ladies even in the
era of ignorance, so much so that she was called "Mother of the
poor". Now she was facing hard times. The Prophet, by marrying her,
preserved her prestige and dignity. She passed away in the life-time of
the Prophet. Year of marriage: 3 A.H.
Ummu Salamah, whose actual name was Hind, was married to
'Abdullah Abu Salamah (another cousin of the Prophet who was also his foster
brother). Abu Salamah and his wife were among the first to migrate to
Abyssinia. She had renounced worldly pleasures and was highly distinguished for
her piety and wisdom. When her husband died, she was very advanced in age and
had many orphaned children. That is why the Prophet married her. Year of
marriage 4 A.H.
Hafsah bint 'Umar ibn al-Khattab was married to him
after her husband Khunays ibn Hudhayfah was martyred during the battle of Badr,
leaving her a widow. Year of marriage 4 A.H.
·
To set free the slaves: His marriage with Juwayriyyah,
i.e. Barrah daughter of al-Harith (chief of Banu al-Mustaliq) was
performed in 5 A.H. after the battle of Banu al-Mustaliq. The Muslims had
arrested two hundred of their families. Juwayriyyah was a widow, and the
Prophet married her after emancipating her. The Muslims said: These are now the
relatives of the Messenger of Allah by marriage; they should not be held
captive. So they freed all of them. Impressed by this nobility, the whole tribe
of Banu al-Mustaliq entered into the fold of Islam. It was a very large
tribe, and this generosity of the Muslims as well as the conversion of that
tribe had a great impact throughout Arabia.
·
To forge friendly relations: Some marriages were
entered into in the hope of establishing friendly relationships with some
tribes in order to blunt their enmity towards Islam.
Ummu Habibah, i.e. Ramlah daughter of Abu Sufyan, was
married to 'Ubaydullah ibn Jahsh and had emigrated with them to Abyssinia in
the second migration. While there, 'Ubaydullah was converted to Christianity,
but she remained steadfastly on Islam and separated from him. Her father, Abu
Sufyan, was in those days raising one army after another in order to annihilate
the Muslims. The Prophet married her and afforded protection to her although
the hope of any change in Abu Sufyan's attitude did not materialize.
Safiyyah was the daughter of Huyaiy ibn Akhtab, (Jewish)
chief of Banu an-Nadhir Her husband was killed in the battle of Khaybar,
and her father sided with Banu Qurayzah. She was among the captives of Khaybar.
The Prophet chose her for himself and married her after emancipating her in 7
A.H. This marriage protected her from humiliation and established a link with
the Jews.
In the midst of the continuing social reforms, the Qur'an
had declared that adoption was not recognized in Islam, that the sons should be
affiliated to their actual fathers. Allah says:
Allah has not made for any man two hearts in his breast, nor has He
made your wives whom you declare (to be your mothers) as your (real) mothers,
nor has He made those whom you call (as your sons) your (real) sons. These are
(mere) words of your mouths, and
Allah speaks the truth and He guides unto the (right) way. Call them after
their fathers; this is more just with Allah, but if you know not their fathers, then they are your brethren in faith and
your friends. (Qur'an, 33:4-5)
After this admonition, people started calling him "Zayd
ibn Harithah". But there was a need to put this new system in effect in
such a way as to leave no room for doubt or ambiguity. Allah, therefore,
ordered the Prophet to marry Zainab bint Jahsh, the divorcee of Zayd ibn
Harithah. The Qur'an explains:
.... But when Zayd had
concluded his concern with her (i.e. divorced her) We joined her in wedlock as
your wife so that there should be no difficulty for the believers concerning
the wives of their adopted sons when they have concluded their concerns with
them, and the command ofAllah shall be carried out. (Qur'an, 33:37)
In this manner, both marriages of Zainab hint Jahsh served
to enforce two very important social ethics. Some non-Muslim writers have
claimed that the Prophet had fallen in love with Zainab's beauty and that this
was why Zayd divorced her. Such writers are blind to the fact that Zainab at
that time was in her fifties. Why did not Muhamaad fall in love with her when
she was still a maiden and he himself was young? Consider this question
especially in view of the fact that Zainab was a close relative of the Prophet,
and that there was no system of hijab at
that time, and, in any case, relatives usually know about each other's beauty
or ugliness.
One of his wives was Maymunah whose name was Barrah bint al-Harith
al-Hilaliyyah. When her second husband died in the 7th year of Hijrah,
she came to the Prophet and "gifted" herself to him if he would
accept her. She only desired the honor of being called the wife of the Prophet.
The Prophet waited for the divine guidance in her regard. Permission was granted
to him from his Lord as we read in verse 33:50 of the Holy Qur'an which says:
O Prophet! Certainly
we have made lawful unto you ... a believing woman if she gifts herself unto the Prophet; if the Prophet
desires to marry her, (it is) especially for thee (O Prophet!) rcjher than for
the rest of the believers. (Qur'an,
33:50)
Thus do we see that each of these marriages had some solid
reasons behind it; passion and lust were not among them.
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