Originally posted by Hesham A. Hassaballa
She was one of the noblest women around, coming from a very
prominent family. She was also quite beautiful and the holder of a
considerable amount of wealth, being a prominent businesswoman. To
marry her would have been a great feat for any man, and indeed, quite a
few of the most prominent and wealthy men in society had asked for her
hand. Yet, she rejected them all; already being a widow, she had lost
the desire to marry again.
Until he came
into her life. He was young man of 25, and although he was also of a
noble family, he was an orphan and was not a man of many means. He had
made a meager living tending sheep in the hills surrounding the city.
Yet, he had an impeccable moral character, and he was widely known as
one of the most honest men around. That is what attracted her to him:
she was looking for someone honest who could conduct business for her,
as she - a woman in a fiercely patriarchal society - could not do it
herself. So, he started working for her.
After
he came back from his first business trip, she asked her servant, whom
she sent with him, about him and his conduct. The servant amazed her by
his report: this young man was the kindest, gentlest man he had ever
met. Never did he treat the servant harshly, as many others do. Yet,
there was more: as they traveled in the heat of the desert, the servant
noticed that a cloud had followed them the entire time, shading them
from the blazing sun. The businesswoman was quite impressed with her
new employee.
Not only that, this new
employee proved to be an astute businessman in his own right. He took
his employer's merchandise, sold it, and with the profits bought other
merchandise that he sold again, thus profiting twice. All this was
enough for her: the embers of love in her heart that were once
extinguished re-kindled again, and she resolved to marry this young
man, who was 15 years younger than she.
So, she sent her sister to this young man. She asked him, "Why are you not married, yet?"
"For lack of means," he answered.
"What if I could offer you a wife of nobility, beauty, and wealth? Would you be interested?" she told him.
He replied in the affirmative, but when she mentioned her sister, the young employee chuckled in amazement.
"How
could I marry her? She has turned down the most noble men in the city,
much wealthier and prominent than me, a poor shepherd," he said.
"Don't you worry," the sister replied, "I'll take care of it."
Not
long after, the wealthy businesswoman married her young employee, and
it was the beginning of one of the most loving, happiest, and sacred
marriages in all of human history: that of Prophet Muhammad and
Khadijah, the daughter of Khuwaylid. When they were married, the
Prophet was 25 years old, and Khadijah was 40. Yet, that did not bother
the Prophet one bit. He loved her so deeply, and she loved him as
deeply. They were married for 25 years, and she bore him seven
children: 3 sons and 4 daughters. All of the sons died in young age.
Khadijah was a source of immense love, strength, and comfort for the
Prophet Muhammad, and he leaned heavily on this love and support on the
most important night of his life.
While
he was meditating in cave of Hira, the Angel Gabriel came to the
Prophet Muhammad and revealed to him the first verses of the Qur'an and
declared to him that he was to be a Prophet. The experience terrified
the Prophet Muhammad, and he ran home, jumping into Khadijah's arms
crying, "Cover me! Cover me!" She was startled by his terror, and after
soothing and comforting him for a while, the Prophet was able to calm
down and relate to her his experience.
The Prophet feared he was going mad or being possessed.
Khadijah
put all his fears to rest: "Do not worry," she said, "for by Him who
has dominion over Khadijah's soul, I hope that you are the Prophet of
this nation. Allah would never humiliate you, for you are good to your
relatives, you are true to your word, you help those who are in need,
you support the weak, you feed the guest and you answer the call of
those who are in distress." She then took him to her cousin, Waraqah
ibn Nawfal - a scholar well-versed in the Judeo-Christian scripture -
and he confirmed to the Prophet that his experience was Divine and he
was to be the Last Prophet.
After his
ministry began, and the opposition of his people became harsh and
brutal, Khadijah was always there to support the Prophet Muhammad,
sacrificing all of her wealth to support the cause of Islam. When the
Prophet and his family was banished to the hills outside of Mecca, she
went there with him, and the three years of hardship and deprivation
eventually led to her death. The Prophet Muhammad mourned her deeply,
and even after her death, the Prophet would send food and support to
Khadijah's friends and relatives, out of love for his first wife.
Once,
years after Khadijah died, he came across a necklace that she once
wore. When he saw it, he remembered her and began to cry and mourn. His
love for her never died, so much so, that his later wife A'isha became
jealous of her. Once she asked the Prophet if Khadijah had been the
only woman worthy of his love. The Prophet replied: "She believed in me
when no one else did; she accepted Islam when people rejected me; and
she helped and comforted me when there was no one else to lend me a
helping hand."
Much has been made and
said about the Prophet Muhammad's (pbuh) multiple marriages. There are
many who smear the Prophet (pbuh) as a womanizing philanderer, citing
those multiple marriages. This is total garbage. If, God forbid, the
Prophet (pbuh) were anything of the sort, he would have taken advantage
of his youth to do such a thing. He did not. He was with no other women
before Khadijah, who was 15 years his senior, and he had no other wife
alongside her, as was common custom at that time.
It was only
after Khadijah died, God rest her soul, that he took on more than one
wife at a time. Most of these wives were widows, whom the Prophet
(pbuh) married to care after them, or they were they were the daughters
of prominent Arab chieftains, so that the Prophet (pbuh) could form a
cohesive Muslim society out of a fiercely tribalistic (and barbaric)
Arab culture. The smears against the Prophet (pbuh) fall flat on their
faces once the light of truth shines brightly upon them.
In a
song about the Prophet and Khadjiah, Muslim rappers Native Deen sing:
"We look for stories of love in places dark and cold/When we have a
guiding light for the whole world to behold." Many of what we call
"love stories" today are nothing more than stories of lust and desire,
physical attraction disguised as love.
Yet, I can find no love
story more powerful, more spiritually uplifting, more awe inspiring as
that of the Prophet Muhammad and Khadijah. It is a shining example of
what an ideal marriage is, and if I ever claim that I love my wife, I
must gauge my actions with that of the Prophet. As the country
commemorates Valentine's Day, and everywhere we turn this month, "love
is in the air," I cannot help but reflect upon, what is to me, the
greatest of all love stories: that of Muhammad and Khadijah. Even with
all of its amazing creative talent, Hollywood could not have come up
with a story greater than this.
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Posted by: kmvwap zhnmvru | August 23, 2008 at 07:26 AM
beatiful story
Posted by: miles | May 26, 2009 at 10:13 AM