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BIOGRAPHY OF PROPHET
MUHAMMAD (PBUH)
Dr. A. Zahoor and Dr.
Z. Haq
(Copyright
1990, 1997, 1998 All Rights Reserved)
Prophet Muhammad (s) was born in 570
CE in Makkah (Bakka,
Baca, Mecca). His father,
Abdullah, died several weeks before his birth in Yathrib
(Medinah) where he went to visit his father's maternal
relatives. His mother died while on the return journey
from Medinah at a place called ‘Abwa’ when he was six
years old. He was raised by his paternal grandfather 'Abd
al Muttalib (Shaybah) until the age of eight, and after
his grandfather’s death by Abu Talib, his paternal
uncle. 'Abd al Muttalib's mother, Salma, was a native of
Medinah and he was born and raised as a young boy in
Medinah before his uncle Muttalib brought him to Makkah
to succeed him. Many years before Muhammad's birth, 'Abd
al Muttalib had established himself as an influential
leader of the Arab tribe ‘Quraish’ in Makkah and took
care of the Holy sanctuary ‘Ka’bah’. Makkah was a
city state well connected to the caravan routes to Syria
and Egypt in the north and northwest and Yemen in the
south. Muhammad was a descendant of Prophet
Ismail through the lineage of his second son
Kedar.
Ka'bah is the first house of
worship built on earth for the
worship of
Allah,
the One True God. It was re-built (raised from the
existing foundation) by Prophets Ibrahim (Abraham) and
Ismail (Ishmael). Allah is the proper name of the
One True God, creator and sustainer of the universe, who
does not have a partner or associate, and He did not
beget nor was He begotten. Unlike the word god, the word
Allah does not have a plural or gender.
Under the guardianship of Abu Talib,
Muhammad (s) began to earn a living as a businessman and
a trader. At the age of twelve, he accompanied Abu Talib
with a merchant caravan as far as Bostra in Syria.
Muhammad was popularly known as ‘al-Ameen’ for
his unimpeachable character by the Makkans and visitors
alike. The title Al-Ameen means the Honest, the Reliable
and the Trustworthy, and it signified the highest
standard of moral and public life.
Upon hearing of Muhammad’s impressive
credentials, Khadijah, a rich merchant widow, asked
Muhammad (s) to take some merchandise for trade to
Syria. Soon after this trip when he was twenty-five,
Khadijah proposed marriage to Muhammad through a
relative. Muhammad accepted the proposal. At that time,
Khadijah was twice widowed and forty years old. Khadijah
(ra) and Muhammad (s) were the parents of six
children - four daughters and two sons. His first
son Qasim died at the age of two. He was nicknamed Abul
Qasim, meaning the father of Qasim. His second son
Abdullah died in infancy. Abdullah was also called
affectionately as ‘Tayyab’ and ‘Tahir’ because he was
born after Muhammad’s prophethood. The four daughters
were: Zainab, Ruqayyah, Umm Kulthum, and Fatimah (ra).
The Holy sanctuary Ka’bah was
now filled with three hundred sixty idols. The original,
pristine message of Prophet Ibrahim was lost, and it was
mixed with superstitions and traditions of pilgrims and
visitors from distant places, who were used to idol
worship and myths. In every generation, a small group of
men and women detested the pollution of Ka’bah and kept
pure their practice of the religion taught by Prophets
Ibrahim and Ismail. They used to spend some of their
time away from this polluted environment in retreats to
nearby hills.
Muhammad (s) was forty when, during
his one of many retreats to Mount Hira for meditation
during the month of Ramadan, he received the first
revelation from the Archangel Jibril (Gabriel). On
this first appearance, Gabriel (as) said to Muhammad: "Iqraa,"
meaning Read or Recite. Muhammad replied, "I
cannot read," as he had
not received any formal education and did not know how
to read or write. The Angel Gabriel then embraced him
until he reached the limit of his endurance and after
releasing said: "Iqraa." Muhammad’s answer was the same
as before. Gabriel repeated the embrace for the third
time, asked him to repeat after him and said:
"Recite in the name of your Lord who
created! He created man from that which clings.
Recite; and thy Lord is most Bountiful, He who has
taught by the pen, taught man what he knew not."
These revelations are the first five
verses of Surah (chapter) 96 of the Qur’an. Thus it was
in the year 610 CE the revelation began.
Muhammad (s) was terrified by the
whole experience of the revelation and fled the
cave of Mt. Hira [Qur'an 81:19-29]. When he reached his
home, tired and frightened, he asked his wife: ‘cover
me, cover me,’ in a blanket. After his awe had somewhat
abated, his wife Khadijah asked him about the reason of
his great anxiety and fear. She then assured him by
saying: "Allah (The One God) will not let you down
because you are kind to relatives, you speak only the
truth, you help the poor, the orphan and the needy, and
you are an honest man. Khadijah then consulted with her
cousin Waraqa who was an old, saintly man possessing
knowledge of previous revelations and scriptures. Waraqa
confirmed to her that the visitor was none other than
the Angel Gabriel who had come to Moses. He then added
that
Muhammad is the expected Prophet.
Khadijah accepted the revelation as truth and was
the first person to accept Islam. She supported her
husband in every hardship, most notably during the
three-year ‘boycott’ of the Prophet’s clan by the pagan
Quraish. She died at the age of sixty-five in the month
of Ramadan soon after the lifting of the boycott in 620
CE.
Gabriel
(as) visited the Prophet as commanded by Allah revealing
Ayat (meaning signs, loosely referred to as verses) in
Arabic over a period of twenty-three years. The
revelations that he received were sometimes a few
verses, a part of a chapter or the whole chapter. Some
revelations came down in response to an inquiry by the
nonbelievers. The revealed verses were recorded on a
variety of available materials (leather, palm leaves,
bark, shoulder bones of animals), memorized as soon as
they were revealed, and were recited in daily prayers by
Muslims [Qur'an 80:13-16]. Angel Gabriel taught the
order and arrangement of verses, and the Prophet
instructed his several scribes to record verses in that
order [Qur'an 75:16-19 and 41:41-42]. Once a year, the
Prophet used to recite all the verses revealed to him up
to that time to Gabriel to authenticate the accuracy of
recitation and the order of verses [Qur'an 17:106]. All
the revealed verses (over
a period of 23 years and
ending in 632 CE) were compiled in the book known as
Qur’an. The name Qur’an appears in the revealed verses.
The
Qur’an
does not contain even a word from the Prophet. The
Qur'an speaks in the first person, i.e., Allah's
commandments to His creation. Gabriel also visited the
Prophet throughout his mission informing and teaching
him of events and strategy as needed to help in the
completion of the prophetic mission. The Prophet’s
sayings, actions, and approvals are recorded separately
in collections known as Hadith.
The mission of Prophet Muhammad
(s) was to restore the worship of the One True God, the
creator and sustainer of the universe, as taught by
Prophet Ibrahim and all
Prophets of God,
and to demonstrate and complete the laws of moral,
ethical, legal, and social conduct and all other matters
of significance for the humanity at large.
The first few people who followed this
message were: his cousin Ali, his servant Zayd ibn
Harithah, his friend Abu Bakr and his wife and
daughters. They accepted Islam by testifying
that:
"There is no Deity (worthy of
worship) except Allah (The One True God) and Muhammad
is the Messenger of Allah."
Islam means peace by submission and
obedience to the Will and Commandments of God and those
who accept Islam are called Muslims, meaning those who
have accepted the message of peace by submission to God.
In the first three years of his
mission forty people (men and women) accepted Islam.
This small group comprised of youth as well as older
people from a wide range of economic and social
background. The Prophet was directed by a recent
revelation to start preaching Islam to everyone. He then
began to recite revelations to people in public and
invite them to Islam. The Quraish, leaders of Makkah,
took his preaching with hostility. The most hostile and
closest to the prophet was his uncle Abu Lahab and his
wife. Initially, they and other leaders of Quraish tried
to bribe him with money and power including
an offer to make him king
if he were to abandon his message. When this did not
work, they tried to convince his uncle Abu Talib to
accept the best young man of Makkah in place of Muhammad
and to allow them to kill Muhammad. His uncle tried to
persuade the Prophet to stop preaching but the Prophet
said: "O uncle, if they were to put the sun in my right
hand and the moon in my left hand to stop me from
preaching Islam, I would never stop. I will keep
preaching until Allah makes Islam prevail or I die."
The Quraish began to persecute Muslims
by beating, torture and boycott of their
businesses. Those who were weak, poor or slaves were
publicly tortured. The first person to die by this means
was a Muslim women by the name Umm Ammar (the mother of
Ammar Ibn Yasir). The Muslims from well-to-do families
were physically restrained in their homes with the
condition that if they recant they will be allowed
freedom of movement. The Prophet was publicly ridiculed
and humiliated including frequent throwing of filth on
him in the street and while he prayed in the Ka’bah. In
spite of great hardships and no apparent support, the
message of Islam kept all Muslims firm in their belief.
The Prophet was asked by God to be patient and to preach
the message of Qur’an. He advised Muslims to remain
patient because he did not receive any revelation yet to
retaliate against their persecutors. [Persecution]
When the persecution became
unbearable for most Muslims, the Prophet advised them in
the fifth year of his mission (615 CE) to emigrate to
Abyssinia (modern Ethiopia) where Ashabah (Negus, a
Christian) was the ruler. Eighty people, not counting
the small children, emigrated in small groups to avoid
detection. No sooner had they left the Arabian
coastline, the leaders of Quraish discovered their
flight. They decided to not leave these Muslims in
peace, and immediately sent two of their envoys to Negus
to bring all of them back. However, Negus allowed them
to stay under his protection after
he investigated Muslim belief
and heard the revelations about
Jesus and Mary
(peace be upon them both), which appears in Chapter 19,
entitled Mary, of the Qur’an. The emigrants were allowed
freedom of worship in Abyssinia.
The Quraish then made life even more
difficult for the Prophet by implementing total ban
on contact with the Prophet’s family (Bani Hashim and
Muttalib). The ban lasted for three years without the
desired effect. Just before the ban was lifted, the
Prophet was contacted by the leaders of Quraish to agree
to a compromise under which they should all practice
both religions (i.e., Islam and Idolatry). Upon hearing
this, the Prophet recited a revelation (Chapter 109) he
had just received and which ends with the words: "...
For you your religion and for me mine." The ban was
lifted when leaders of Quraish discovered that their
secret document on the terms of ban, which they had
stored in Ka’bah, was eaten by worms and all that was
left were the opening words ‘In Your name, O Allah.’ The
effects of the three-year boycott left the Prophet with
more personal sorrow when he lost his beloved wife
Khadijah (ra) and uncle Abu Talib soon after the ban was
lifted.
After Khadijah's death
in 620 CE, the Prophet married a widowed Muslim woman,
Sawdah (ra) who was fifty years old. She and her husband
had emigrated to Abyssinia in the early years of
persecution. After her husband died, she came back to
Makkah and sought Prophet’s shelter. The Prophet,
recognizing her sacrifices for Islam, extended his
shelter by marrying her. Later in the same year, the
Prophet upon receiving the divine command in a dream,
after approval of Sawdah, contracted marriage to A’ishah,
the daughter of his dear companion
Abu Bakr.
She joined the Prophet in Medinah, completing the
marriage contract. Sawdah and A’ishah (ra) were the only
wives until he was fifty-six years old.
After the death of his uncle Abu Talib,
the Prophet went to Taif (about 50 miles east,
southeast of Makkah) to seek their protection. They
flatly refused and mocked at him, and severely injured
him by inciting their children to throw stones at him.
Gabriel (as) visited the Prophet here suggesting that
the angels were ready to destroy the town if he were to
ask Allah for the punishment. Nevertheless,
the Prophet declined
and prayed for future generations of Taif to accept
Islam [Taif].
It was on the return journey from Taif that the verses
from Surah Al Jinn (Chapter 72) were revealed. It
indicated that the Qur’an is a book of guidance to both
the
Jinns
and Humankind.
Soon after the terrible disappointment
at Ta’if, the prophet experienced the events of al-Israa
and al-Miraaj (621 CE). In the Al-Israa, Gabriel
(as) took the Prophet from the sacred Mosque near
Ka’bah
to the furthest (al-Aqsa) mosque in Jerusalem in
a very short time in the latter part of a night. Here,
Prophet Muhammad met with previous Prophets (Abraham,
Moses, Jesus and others) and he led them in prayer.
After this, in Al-Miraj, the Prophet was taken up to
heavens to show the signs of God [More...
The Dome of the Rock].
It was on this journey that five daily prayers were
prescribed. He was then taken back to Ka’bah, the whole
experience lasting a few hours of a night. Upon hearing
this, the people of Makkah mocked at him. However, when
his specific description of Jerusalem, other things on
the way, and the caravan that he saw on this journey
including its expected arrival in Makkah turned out to
be true, the ridicule of the nonbelievers stopped. The
event of Israa and Miraaj is mentioned in the Qur’an -
the first verse of Chapter 17 entitled ‘The Children of
Israel.’
In 622 CE, the leaders of the Quraish
decided to kill the Prophet and they developed a
plan in which one man was chosen from each of the
Quraish tribes and they were to attack the Prophet
simultaneously. Gabriel informed the Prophet of the plan
and instructed him to leave Makkah immediately. The
Prophet, after making arrangements to return the
properties entrusted to him by several nonbelievers,
left with Abu Bakr in the night he was to be
assassinated. They went south of Makkah to a mountain
cave of Thawr [see Qur'an 9:40], and after staying three
nights they traveled north to Yathrib (Medinah) about
two hundred fifty miles from Makkah. Upon discovery of
his escape, the leaders of Quraish put up a reward of
one hundred camels on him, dead or alive. In spite of
all their best scouts and search parties, Allah
protected the Prophet and
he arrived safely in Quba,
a suburb of Medinah [Qur'an 28:85]. This event is known
as the ‘Hijra’ (migration) and the Islamic
calendar begins with this event. The people of Aws and
Khazraj in Medinah greeted him with great enthusiasm in
accordance with their
pledge
made at Aqaba less than a year ago during the
annual pilgrimage. One by one those Muslims (men and
women) of Makkah who were not physically restrained, and
who could make a secret exit, left for Medinah leaving
behind their properties and homes.
To insure the peace and tranquility,
the Prophet proposed a
treaty
defining terms of conduct for all inhabitants of Medinah.
It was ratified by all - Muslims, non-Muslim Arabs and
Jews. After his emigration to Medinah, the enemies of
Islam increased their assault from all sides. The
Battles of Badr, Uhud and Allies (Trench) were fought
near or around Medinah. In these battles until the year
627 CE, the nonbelievers with encouragement from Jews
and other Arabian tribes attacked the Prophet and Muslim
community. The Muslims while defending their city and
religion lost many men, which resulted in many
widowed Muslim women and numerous orphaned children.
In these circumstances, Prophet Muhammad (s) married
several women during fifty-sixth year up to the sixtieth
year of his life. He did not contract any marriage in
the last three years of his life, following the
revelation limiting the number of wives up to a maximum
of four. This is the first time in the history of
revealed scriptures that a limit on the number of wives
was imposed and the terms of conduct were specified. The
Prophet was instructed not to divorce any of his wives
after this revelation [Qur'an 33:52]. All of the ladies
he took as wives were either widowed or divorced, except
A’ishah.
The Prophet married Umm Salamah (ra)
in 626 CE. Her husband had died of wounds inflicted in
the Battle of Uhud (625 CE). When the Prophet asked her
for marriage, she replied: "O Messenger of God, I suffer
from three shortcomings. I am a very jealous woman, and
I am afraid this might cause me to do things that you
dislike. Secondly, I am an old woman. Finally, I have
many children." The Prophet answered: "Regarding your
jealousy, I pray to God to remove it from you. As for
your age, we are similar in age. As for the children,
your children are mine." Thus it was that she agreed to
marry the Prophet. The Prophet’s marriage contract with
Umm Habibah
(ra) was solemnized, by proxy, by Negus, King of
Abyssinia, in 628 CE.
Two of his wives, Juwayriah and
Safiyah, were prisoners of war. Both belonged to the
family of the chief of their tribes and were set free by
the Prophet; they then gladly accepted Islam and were
pleased to become the Prophet’s wives. The Prophet’s
marriages provided security to women who would have
otherwise remained unmarried, unprotected, or felt
humiliated. His marriages were also a means of
transmitting important teachings of Islam. The Prophet's
wives, called the "Mothers of the Believers,"[Qur'an
Surah 33, Verse 6 and the last part of Verse 53] showed
themselves as examples of proper Muslim womanhood. All
his wives, especially 'Aishah, transmitted many ahadith
(sayings, deeds, and actions) from Prophet Muhammad (s).
A year after the Battle of Allies
(Trench), the Prophet and fifteen hundred of his
companions left for Makkah to perform the annual
pilgrimage (628 CE). They were barred from approaching
the city at Hudaybiyah, where after some
negotiations a
treaty
was signed allowing for them to come next year. This
treaty facilitated exchange of ideas among the people of
the whole region without interference. Many delegations
from all regions of Arabia came to the Prophet to
investigate the teachings of Islam, and a large number
of people accepted Islam within a couple of years. The
Prophet sent many of his companions (who memorized the
Qur'an by heart) to new communities to instruct them
about the practice of Islam. More than fifty of them
were murdered by non-believers.
A few weeks after Hudaybiyah the
Prophet sent
letters to several kings and rulers
(including the two superpowers - Byzantines and
Persians) inviting them to
Islam.
Negus, the king of Abyssinia, and the
Ruler of Bahrain accepted Islam,
and
Emperor Heraclius acknowledged
Muhammad’s Prophethood.
Among rulers who accepted Islam but without any
initiative from the Prophet was
Chakrawati Farmas, a Hindu King of
Malabar (located on the
southwest coast of India).
About two years later at the end of
629 CE, the Quraish violated the terms of the Treaty
of Hudaybiyah by helping Banu Bakr in the surprise
attack on Bani Khuza’ah who were allied with the
Prophet. Some of Bani Khuzah’s men escaped and took
shelter in Makkah and they sought redress. However, the
leaders of Quraish did nothing. They then sent a message
to the Prophet for help.
The Prophet, after confirming all the
reports of the attack and subsequent events, marched
to Makkah with an army consisting of three thousand
Muslims of Medinah and Muslims from other Arab
communities that joined him on the way totaling
ten thousand Muslims.
Before entering the city he sent word to citizens of
Makkah that anyone who remained in his home, or in Abu
Sufyan’s home, or in the Ka’bah would be safe. The army
entered Makkah without fighting and the Prophet went
directly to the Ka’bah. He magnified Allah for the
triumphant entry in the Holy city. The Prophet pointed
at each idol with a stick he had in his hand and said,
"Truth has come and Falsehood will neither start nor
will it reappear" [Qur'an 17:81]. And one by one the
idols fell down. The Ka’bah was then cleansed by the
removal of all three hundred sixty idols, and it was
restored to its pristine status for the worship of One
True God (as built by Prophets Ibrahim and Ismail).
The people of the city expected
general slaughter in view of their persecution and
torture of Muslims for the past twenty years. While
standing by the Ka'bah, the Prophet (s) promised
clemency for the Makkans, stating: "O Quraish, what do
you think that I am about to do with you?" They replied,
"Good. You are a noble brother, son of a noble brother."
The Prophet forgave them all saying:
"I will treat you as Prophet Yousuf
(Joseph) treated his brothers. There is no reproach
against you. Go to your homes, and you are all free."
The Prophet also declared:
Allah made Makkah holy the day He
created heavens and earth, and it is the holy of
holies until the Resurrection Day. It is not lawful
for anyone who believes in Allah and the last day to
shed blood therein, nor to cut down trees therein. It
was not lawful to anyone before me and it will not be
lawful to anyone after me.
The people of Makkah then accepted
Islam including the staunch enemies of the Prophet. A
few of the staunchest enemies and military commanders
had fled Makkah after his entry. However, when they
received the Prophet’s assurance of no retaliation and
no compulsion in religion, they came back and gradually
the message of Islam won their hearts. Within a year
(630 CE), almost all Arabia accepted Islam. Among the
Prophet’s close companions were Muslims from such
diverse background as
Persia,
Abyssinia, Syria and Rome. Several prominent Jewish
Rabbis, Christian bishop and clergymen accepted Islam
after discussions with the Prophet.
One night in March 630 CE, Angel
Gabriel visited the Prophet and addressed him as: "O
father of Ibrahim." A few hours later, the Prophet
received the news of the birth of his son from
his wife
Mariah,
and the Prophet named him Ibrahim. He was the only child
born after the six children from Prophet’s first wife
Khadijah. Ibrahim died when he was ten months old. On
the day of Ibrahim's death, there was an eclipse of the
sun. When some people began to attribute it to the
Prophet's bereavement, he said: "The sun and the moon
are two signs of the signs of God. Their light is not
dimmed for any man's death. If you see them eclipsed,
you should pray until they be clear."
The great change in Arabia alarmed the
two superpowers, Byzantines and Persians. Their
Governors, particularly the Byzantines, reacted with
threats to attack Medinah. Instead of waiting, the
prophet sent a small army to defend the northmost border
of Arabia. In the remaining life of the Prophet, all of
the major battles were fought on the northern front. The
Prophet did not have a standing army. Whenever he
received a threat, he called the Muslims and discussed
with them the situation and gathered volunteers to fight
any aggression.
The Prophet performed his first and
last pilgrimage
in 632 CE. One hundred twenty-thousand men and women
performed pilgrimage that year with him. The Prophet
received the last revelation during this
pilgrimage. Two months later, Prophet Muhammad (s) fell
ill and after several days
died on
Monday, 12 Rabi al-Awwal, the eleventh year after Hijra
(June 8, 632 CE) in Medinah. He is buried in the same
place where he died.
Prophet Muhammad lived a most simple,
austere and modest life. He and his family used to go
without cooked meal several days at a time, relying only
on dates, dried bread and water. During the day he was
the busiest man, as he performed his duties in many
roles all at once as head of state, chief justice,
commander-in-chief, arbitrator, instructor and family
man. He was the most devoted man at night. He used to
spend one- to two-thirds of every night in prayer and
meditation. The Prophet's possession consisted of mats,
blankets, jugs and other simple things even when he was
the virtual ruler of Arabia. He left nothing to be
inherited except a white mule (a gift from
Muqawqis),
few ammunition and a piece of land that he had made a
gift during his life time. Among his last words were:
"We the community of Prophets are not inherited.
Whatever we leave is for charity."
Muhammad (s)
was a man and a messenger of Allah (The One God). He is
the last of the prophets [Qur'an 33:40] sent by
Allah to guide man to the right path; Adam was the first
Prophet. The
Qur’an mentions twenty-five Prophets
by name and provides a
great insight of their mission, struggle and their
communities. The Qur’an exonerates prophets from charges
leveled against them in previous Scriptures. The Qur’an
also mentions four previously revealed Scriptures:
Suhoof (Pages) of Ibrahim (Abraham), Taurat ('Torah') as
revealed to Prophet Moses, Zuboor ('Psalms') as revealed
to Prophet David, and Injeel ('Evangel') as revealed to
Prophet Jesus (pbuh). Islam requires belief in all
prophets and revealed scriptures (original,
non-corrupted) as part of the Articles of Faith.
Muhammad (s) is greatly respected as the model of
Qur’anic behavior. Muslims mention his name by adding
"peace be upon him," a phrase used with the name of all
prophets [e.g., Qur'an Surah 37: verses 79, 109, 120 and
130; also 33:56]. All sincere Muslims try to follow the
Qur’an and the Prophet’s example to minute details. The
account of every aspect of his life has been preserved
(numerous daily accounts including his family life).
Prophet Muhammad (s) has served as an example for all
Muslims in all periods to modern times. He will remain a
model example for all of humanity.
At the end of his mission, the Prophet
was blessed with several hundred thousand followers (men
and women) of Islam. Thousands prayed with him at the
mosque and listened to his sermon. Hundreds of sincere
Muslims would find every opportunity to be with him
following five daily prayers and at other times. They
used to seek his advice for their everyday problems, and
listened attentively to the interpretation and
application of revealed verses to their situation. They
followed the message of the Qur’an and the Messenger of
Allah with utmost sincerity, and supported him with
every thing they had. The most excellent among them are
Abu Bakr, 'Umar, 'Uthman, Ali, Talha, Zubair, 'Abdur
Rahman ibn Auf, S'ad bin Abi Waqqas, S'ad bin Zaid, Abu
'Ubeidah, Hasan, Hussain, and several dozen others. They
faithfully carried the message of Islam after the
Prophet, and within ninety years the light of Islam
reached Spain, North Africa, the Caucasus, northwest
China and India.

Allah:
Allah is the proper name in Arabic for The One and
Only God, The Creator and Sustainer of the universe.
It is used by the Arab Christians and Jews for the God
(Eloh-im in Hebrew; 'Allaha' in Aramaic, the mother
tongue of Jesus, pbuh). The word
Allah
does not have a plural or gender. Allah does not have
any associate or partner, and He does not beget nor
was He begotten. SWT is an abbreviation of Arabic
words that mean 'Glory Be To Him.'
s or pbuh:
Peace Be Upon Him. This expression is
used for all
Prophets of Allah.
ra: Radiallahu Anha (May Allah be pleased with
her).
ra: Radiallahu Anhu (May Allah be pleased with
him).
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