[ARTICLE] More women in hell?

Madina Archives


Madinat al-Muslimeen Islamic Message Board

[ARTICLE] More women in hell?
Anonymous
07/22/01 at 04:49:10


MORE WOMEN THAN MEN IN HELL?
by
Ruqaiyyah Waris Maqsood.

(Many passages in this article were taken from her book on the Life of
the Prophet, due out later this year insha’Allah, and where no
reference is given to the sahih hadith collections, they were derived from Ibn
Hisham or Ibn Sa’d).



I have often pondered the attitude of many pious Muslims who although
they dearly love Allah and His Messenger (Allah bless him and give him
peace) nevertheless seem to have a reverence based on fear. If one reads
the Qur’an and hadith collections, it is as plain as the nose on your
face that the chief characteristic of our dear Lord Allah is His
Compassion, His understanding love. The fact that He is the Compassionate, the
Merciful introduces every surah except surah 9 (probably because it is
most likely a continuation of surah 8) and every prayer. Yes, there is
sternness and justice when dealing with evil, but above all, there is
enormous compassion for weakness and mistakes. The Almighty our Creator
knows full well that we are but human beings, full of faults and sins
and disappointments and blind-spots. It is one of the greatest blessings
that when it comes to punishing us for our failings, our Lord does not
judge as a human being does, but in a way we can never fully understand
or appreciate. His compassion is so far above our own.

As He revealed to us in the Qur’an, if He punished us according to what
we deserved, there would be left on earth no living thing. (Surah
35:45). Alhamdulillah!

Similarly, our beloved Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) was
the living example for us of all the qualities Allah wished us to
encourage and build up in ourselves. He was gentle, and kind, and
honourable, and brave, taking the side of the helpless, the children, the
destitute, the abused women. He did this even before his call to Prophethood,
for it was the main aim of the Order of Chivalry (the Hilf al-Fudul)
founded by his uncle Zubayr b. Abd al-Muttalib, and the chief of Taym,
Abdallah b. Juda’an.

So, whenever we come across a bald statement in the writings that seems
to be out of keeping, and looks as if our beloved Prophet (Allah bless
him and give him peace) couldn’t possibly have said that for it does
not ring true with what we know about him, we must look a little deeper
to see if there is some aspect of it that we have perhaps missed.
Needless to say, the very first rule of judging whether or not a hadith is
reliable is to test it against the teaching and spirit of the Qur’an. Any
hadith that disagrees with the Qur’an cannot possibly be genuine.

The western media is frequently accused of misunderstanding Islam, so
let us look briefly at a few stunning headlines that might have appeared
shortly before 632 CE. They all give pause for thought.

Prophet dooms young orphan girl to early death.’

Prophet curses favourite wife from his death-bed.’

‘Prophet insists Paradise is denied to old women.’

‘Prophet rages: ‘Hell is two-thirds full of women!’’

None of these headlines would sound at all right to anyone who knows
anything about Islam. All the Prophet’s (Allah bless him and give him
peace) words, actions and way of life reveal him as a man of gentleness,
kindness, humility, good humour and excellent common sense, who had a
great love for all people, especially for his family. Aishah said of him:
‘The Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) never abused or spoke
ill of anybody. He forgave faults and refrained from retaliation. He
never thought of taking personal revenge, forgave non-believers promptly
on their conversion to Islam; never fought on personal grounds; took an
interest in his household affairs; condemned vendettas and blood feuds;
and never beat anyone, not even a slave’. When Aishah was asked what
the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) was like at home, she
said: ‘He does what you all do in your houses – he also patches his
clothes and repairs his shoes, and feeds his goats.’ He used to ‘serve his
family’, and help them in their household chores until the time came for
prayer, and then he would go out. She said: ‘He was more bashful than a
maiden in seclusion, but when he disliked something, we could see it
immediately in his face.’

He never used to speak badly of people, following the principle that if
you couldn’t say something good, then say nothing at all. He disliked
whispering and sniggering. He once said: ‘If you are three people, two
of you should not speak in a confidential manner in the presence of the
third until you mix with other people, because that brings sadness to
the heart of the third person, who feels left out, and alienates him.’
Those who spoke with him knew that they would be treated with courtesy,
forbearance, modesty and trust. He disliked raised voices, and never
shouted or uttered obscene words, or indulged in fault-finding. He simply
ignored what he did not like, and did not make a fuss about it.
Moreover, he was very kind, and never gossiped or made known the shortcomings
of anyone, or exposed their defects to others. He did not attempt to
find out people’s secrets, and when told them, he never declared them to
others. The one thing he did hate was lying. Aishah recorded: ‘No habit
was more disgusting to him than telling a lie. If he found out about
anyone lying, he kept away from that person until they were genuinely
sorry for it.’ Yet if he disapproved of something, he never told the
person directly or abruptly, but simply let his wishes be known tactfully.

He also hated suspicion, and said: ‘Suspicion is the worst of false
tales; and do not look for the others' faults and do not spy, and do not
be jealous of one another, and do not desert (cut your relation with)
one another, and do not hate one another; and O Allah's worshippers! Be
brothers (as Allah has ordered you)! (Bukhari 8.90).

The Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) believed in good
manners, always greeting people kindly, showing respect to elders. He was
never arrogant or ‘superior’ despite his eminent position as leader,
making no-one ever feel small, unwanted or embarrassed. People who sat in
his company never felt that he was rude to them, or that he ignored or
neglected them. When he shook hands with someone, he was never the first
to withdraw his hand. He would not break off a conversation until he
was sure the person had finished and was ready to turn away, and he never
turned his face away from the person he was talking to.

He had done that once in the early days in Makkah, when blind Abdallah
b. Umm Maktum came to interrupt him with a question about one of the
revealed verses. At the time he was deep in conversation with Walid b.
Mughirah and his influential friends Uqbah and Shaybah b. Rabi’ah, Abu
Jahl and Umayyah b. Khalaf. The Prophet’s (Allah bless him and give him
peace) momentary impatience earned him a violent headache and temporary
partial blindness, and a rebuke from Allah that came in the revelation
of Surah 80:1-16. For years after that he used to greet Abdallah with
the words: ‘Salaam to the one on behalf of whom my Sustainer has rebuked
me.’ This was the Ibn Umm Maktum (called both Abdallah and Amr in the
sources) who was frequently deputised to lead the prayers in Madinah
when the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) was on his
expeditions.

Some people have supposed the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace) to have been a severe, austere man, but in fact he was always
smiling. One companion said of him: ‘I have seen no person smiling more than
the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him and give him peace).’ Aishah
said: ‘He was the softest and most kind of all people; and he was a man
like you, except that he was cheerful and smiling.’

When people laughed, he laughed with them. Although his laugh was
usually no more than a smile, sometimes it was said of him that he threw
back his head and laughed so completely that his teeth shone like white
hailstones. There are many hadiths recording how the Prophet (Allah bless
him and give him peace) laughed so heartily at something that people
could see his molar teeth! For example, when Aishah as a child argued
with him about her model horses with wings, and pointed out that Solomon
had such horses, ‘Thereupon the Apostle of Allah (peace be upon him)
laughed so heartily that I could see his molar teeth.’ (Abu Dawud 2316).

During one time of drought he prayed for rain, and ‘the rain fell by
Allah's permission, and before he reached his mosque streams were
flowing. When he saw the speed with which the people were seeking shelter, he
(peace be upon him) laughed till his back teeth were visible. Then he
said: ‘I testify that Allah is Omnipotent and that I am Allah's servant
and apostle.’ (Abu Dawud 452).

Examples of many other hadiths making a point of mentioning the
Prophet’s (Allah bless him and give him peace) laughter are Bukhari
3.157;Bukhari 6.466; Bukhari 8.299; Bukhari 9.510; and Muslim 82;

He had, in fact, a whimsical sense of humour, revealed in many of his
sayings, and the nicknames he gave people. For example, any lady who was
called Barrah immediately got her name changed to something else, for
‘barrah’ meant ‘good’, and the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace) explained that if he did not change that name he would never be
able to say ‘goodbye’, for it hurt him to bid farewell to the Good.

Other nicknames included Abu Hurayrah (‘Father of the little cat’ – so
called because when he worked as a shepherd he used to keep a kitten),
and Abu Turab (‘Father of dust’ – the Prophet’s (Allah bless him and
give him peace) name for his son-in-law Ali, who used to throw dust on
himself whenever he and Fatimah had a disagreement).

The Prophet’s (Allah bless him and give him peace) wives were known as
‘the glass vessels’. Anas recorded how he and Umm Sulaym had been in
company with the Prophet’s (Allah bless him and give him peace) wives
once while they were travelling in howdahs, being hurried along by
Anjasha’s singing. ‘Gently, O Anjasha,’ cried the Prophet (Allah bless him and
give him peace) to the camel-driver. ‘Be careful – these camels are
carrying delicate glass vessels. Don’t break them.’(Muslim 5746).

One day when they were digging the Ditch before the Battle of al-Ahzab
the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) fell asleep from sheer
exhaustion, and Abu Bakr and Umar stood guard over him keeping the
labourers away so that he could sleep in peace. Zayd b. Thabit, who was
just sixteen and preparing for his first experience of battle, also fell
asleep. Umarah b. Hazm played a practical joke on him, stealing his
clothes and tools, and hiding them. Thus Zayd earned the nickname Abu Ruqad
(the ‘Sleepy One’ or ‘Father of Dreams’).

One of the keenest diggers was the ‘little beetle’, Amr b. Suraqah
(Ju’ayl). One of his companions gave rhythm to his digging with the song:

His name he changed, Ju’ayl to Amr,

gave the poor man that day his help.’

The Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) joined in by only
shouting the words at the end of each line loudly, making people laugh.

Surely it would be improper for a prophet of God to have a sense of
humour? Far from it -– it only seems improper to those who have not read
about the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) with
understanding. In fact, he was not a dour pronouncer of doom except when such
pronouncements were necessary -– he was a man who was attractive and alive
with humour, forever drawing people to the faith, not driving them away.
He once said: ‘The dearest of you to me are those who have good
manners; the most offensive to me are the most boring and the long-winded!’

Umar b. Khattab recorded that during the lifetime of the Prophet (Allah
bless him and give him peace) there was a man called Abdullah whose
nickname was Donkey, who regularly used to make the Prophet (Allah bless
him and give him peace) laugh. One day the Prophet (Allah bless him and
give him peace) had him flogged because of drinking alcohol. A little
later he was brought back again on the same charge and was lashed again.
At that, one of the men said, ‘O Allah, curse him! How frequently he
has been brought (to the Prophet on such a charge)!’ The Prophet said:
‘Do not curse him, for by Allah, I know for he loves Allah and His
Apostle.’ (Bukhari 8.771).

Nothing enraged him, and he despised no-one – except those overcome by
evil, who were opposed to Allah and His ways. Even so, it was not the
person, but the evil that had taken hold of them that was despised. Once
any such person repented and turned back to good, he or she was
accepted instantly, and forgiven – both by Allah and His Messenger (Allah
bless him and give him peace). He did not take offence at anything and then
take revenge on the person who offended him, unless the sacred things
of Allah had been violated, in which case he would only take revenge for
the sake of Allah. He certainly never made unpleasant remarks designed
to hurt or spite people.

However, sometimes his remarks were given with dry humour, which has
been misinterpreted by those who have taken such statements literally.
For example, the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) took a dim
view of Muslims who could not manage to offer a few prayers during the
night—referring to them as ‘those in whose ears the Devil has
urinated!’ He did not mean this literally.

Once he made an old lady cry by teasing her that there would be no old
women in Paradise. She was devastated until he explained that what he
meant was that Allah would make all old people young again.

Once Umm Ayman asked him if she could have a camel. He commented that
he would only mount her on the offspring of a she-camel. Umm Ayman was
hardly satisfied – and pointed out that it would not be able to bear her
weight. ‘Mother,’ the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace)
insisted, ‘I will only mount you on the offspring of a she-camel’ At last
she realised he was joking with her, for all camels were offspring of
she-camels!

Qaswah was the Prophet’s (Allah bless him and give him peace) favourite
camel, and was with him until he died, having shared many significant
moments with him – notably the hijrah, the pilgrimages, the surrender of
Makkah, and the Final Pilgrimage. She was not only famous, but very
fleet of foot, and was never beaten in a race until a Bedouin on a much
younger camel finally succeeded. They hardly dared inform the Prophet
(Allah bless him and give him peace) of this ‘humiliation’, but knowing
that all creatures slow down with old age, he merely smiled and said:
‘Allah has the right to humiliate those who rise high in the world.’

At the Battle of Khaybar the Prophet’s (Allah bless him and give him
peace) forces were assisted by Umm Sulaym who came with an orphan girl
she had raised in her household as her own daughter. The Prophet (Allah
bless him and give him peace) saw her and teased her: ‘How can that be
you? You seem to have grown younger! May you never advance in years.’
The poor girl totally misunderstood him, and Umm Sulaym found her in
tears. She explained that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace)
had cursed her so that she would never live to old age. Umm Sulaym
rushed straightway to confront him with this outrage. He smiled and said:
‘Umm Sulaym, don’t worry. I have made a bargain with my Lord - I am only
human, and am pleased or in bad temper like any other person; but I
asked Allah that if I ever cursed a person who did not deserve it, then
Allah would on the contrary let that be a source of purity and nearness
to Him for that person, on the Day of Resurrection’. (Muslim 6297).

After the Farewell Pilgrimage at the Eid prayer, the Prophet (Allah
bless him and give him peace) walked past the men leaning on Bilal’s arm,
and came to the rows of women behind them. Bilal spread out a cloth and
the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) urged the women to be
generous with their gifts of charity, for when he had been allowed a
glimpse into the flames of Hell, he had noted that most of the people
being tormented there were women. The women were outraged, and one of them
instantly stood up boldly and demanded to know why that was so.
‘Because,’ he replied, ‘you women grumble so much, and show ingratitude to
your husbands! Even if the poor fellows spent all their lives doing good
things for you, you have only to be upset at the least thing and you
will say, 'I have never received any good from you!’ (Bukhari 1.28,
recorded by Ibn Abbas – who was present on that occasion as a child). At that
the women began vigorously to pull off their rings and ear-rings, and
throw them into Bilal’s cloth.

Even on his deathbed the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace)
made characteristic remarks. He had requested Abu Bakr to lead the
prayers in his place, but he heard Umar’s voice and demanded an explanation.
Aishah admitted she had sent Umar, explaining that her father was too
distressed and overcome with emotion, his voice shook, and he wept when
he recited the Qur’an. The Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace)
insisted it was to be Abu Bakr, and called Aishah ‘one of the women of
Joseph’ (that is, one of those who were tempted to seduce the Prophet
Yusuf/Joseph (Allah bless him and give him peace). He also used the
expression ‘may your hand be cut off.’ He had only said those words fondly,
but when he noticed later that Aishah kept looking at her hands he
asked her what was the matter. She told him she was wondering which hand
she would lose!

Thus it is that reading and pondering deeply on the hadiths pays
enormous rewards to those who love the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace). Phrases that had at first seemed like teachings hostile to
women when taken out of context suddenly bring us close to our Messenger,
and we feel instead his love and humour and humanity.

In conclusion, perhaps we should note that it was not only the
Prophet’s (Allah bless him and give him peace) humour that was sometimes
misunderstood, but even straightforward statements.

For example, it was the normal practice of the female Companions to
pray in the mosque, with no sutrah dividing them from their men. They
prayed behind them, but with no dividing walls or curtains – which one
could argue might have invalidated their prayer ‘in congregation’. Yet
nowadays, in some places we find devout brothers in Islam depriving women
of their rightful place in the mosque by quoting the hadith that it is
better for women to pray at home. Where did this originate? In fact, it
came from an occasion when an elderly and arthritic Muslim lady—Umm
Humayd—expressed her regret to the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace) that although she longed to pray behind him in the mosque, as so
many others did, she was not able to be there. The Prophet (Allah bless
him and give him peace) told her not to be concerned about this, it was
better for her to pray in her own home (Abu Dawud 570). Many male
Muslims have misguidedly used this hadith to try to prevent their women from
going to mosques, and have turned them into ‘male clubs’ where any
women who do go feel obtrusive, shy and ‘pushy’, when it is obvious from so
many other hadiths that it was the normal practice in Madinah for them
to go. For example, Caliph Umar’s grandson tried to prevent his wife,
but was over-ruled by his father since the Prophet (Allah bless him and
give him peace) had encouraged them saying: ‘Do not prevent the
handmaids of Allah from attending the mosque.’ Muslim 888, Abu Dawud 568.

Sometimes the supposed anti-female hadith seems completely untrue. One
such hadith was the one that no nation that allowed itself to be ruled
by a woman would prosper. This may have been an example of one of the
Prophet’s (Allah bless him and give him peace) wry comments, but it is
suspect for it was only quoted for the first time by Abu Bakra just
before the Battle of Siffin, some thirty years after the Prophet’s (Allah
bless him and give him peace) death. The reason was that the troops
opposing Caliph Ali were in fact being led by a woman, none other than the
Prophet’s (Allah bless him and give him peace) beloved wife Aishah!

The hadith seems in direct opposition to the words of the Qur’an to the
ruling Queen of Sheba in the time of the Prophet Sulayman (Solomon),
who ruled over the most wealthy and well-known people in the history of
Arabia. She was asked to accept Islam, but not to give up her rule
(Surah 27:23-44).

Indeed, some feel that Abu Bakra’s testimony should be held in doubt
anyway, since he had previously been flogged for a fraudulent statement,
and the shari’ah ruling was that after such an offence the person’s
word should never again be upheld as reliable in a court of law. However,
Abu Bakra was a noble Companion who had converted to Islam from Taif,
and who related several hadiths. His ‘offence’ concerned the case of
Mugheera b. Shu'ba, a man known for his weakness for women. He would marry
women and would divorce them after some time to make room for more
beautiful faces. In this way, he married no less than 80 wives, taking
steps to ensure that at a time his wives were not more than four, the limit
prescribed by the Shariah.

In those days at Basra, there was a beautiful woman Umm Jamil. She
belonged to the same tribe as that of Mugheera. Her husband had died and
she became notorious for loose morals. Mugheera was attracted by her and
she visited him often.

Some Muslims in Basra became critical of the conduct of Mugheera. Among
them was Abu Bakra Thaqeefi whose house across the street faced the
house of Mugheera.

One day a strong wind blew and the windows of the houses of Abu Bakra
and Mugheera got opened through the force of the wind. He saw through
the window that in this house Mugheera was locked in an uncompromising
state with a woman. He thought that the woman was Umm Jamil. He had some
friends with him, and they also saw Mugheera involved with a woman.

Abu Bakra wrote to Caliph Umar accusing Mugheera of adultery. The
report was endorsed by four witnesses who had seen Mugheera in an
uncompromising state with a woman. Umar took prompt action. Umar appointed Abu
Musa as the Governor of Basra and removed Mugheera from the office.
Mugheera was summoned to Madinah to face trial. Abu Bakra and the other
witnesses who had made the complaint were also summoned to Madinah.

At the trial, Mugheera pleaded not guilty. His defence was that the
woman in question was his wife and not Umm Jamil. With great indignation
he averred that Abu Bakra and the men with him had no right to interfere
in his privacy. Abu Bakra on the other hand maintained that the woman
was Umm Jamil. Three other witnesses corroborated the statement of Abu
Bakra. The fourth witness Ziyad stated that he had seen the event, but
he had not seen the face of the woman and did not know who she was. The
other witnesses were cross examined, and it was found that there were
some weak points in their evidence. They were asked whether the woman
had her back or her face toward them. They said that she had their back
to them. They tried to make out that even from her back she could be
identified as Umm Jamil. They argued that the scandal of Mugheera and Umm
Jamil was very common in Basra, and that lady was none else but Umm
Jamil.

Under the Quranic law in order to press the charge of adultery definite
evidence of four witnesses was necessary. As in this case the fourth
witness was not sure of the identification of the woman, Mugheera was
given the benefit of doubt and acquitted. Abu Bakra and his companions who
had levelled the charge were punished with lashes for making a charge
which could not be established. Such was the care that was taken with
evidence for adultery in those days! However, one feels that Abu Bakra
did not deserve his flogging.

In spite of his acquittal, Mugheera was not restored to the office of
the Governor, and was detained in Madinah. He made some show of
indignation at having been treated shabbily in a case which was false. Umar
called him to his presence and issued the warning: "O Mugheera offer
thanks to God that full evidence was not forthcoming against you, and you
have been saved from disgrace by a technical flaw. Grounds of suspicion
against you were very much there, and I have given you the benefit of
doubt. Remember that if the evidence was complete, you would have been
stoned to death." (From the lives of the Caliphs, Alim CD).


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Postscript

I would like to examine more closely the saying about Hell being
two-thirds full of women. The hadith in fact came in several different
versions, based on two quite separate occasions - the first being the
collection of alms after the Eid prayer, as I have presented it in my article,
and the second being the day of the tragic death of the Prophet’s
(Allah bless him and give him peace) son Ibrahim, when an eclipse occurred.
Added phrases mention the women’s practice of Islam as being inferior
to that of the men.

Taking the ‘eclipse’ sayings first:

Abdullah bin Abbas (who was also the source of the hadith given in
Bukhari 1:28, where the occasion was the Eid prayer) narrated: The sun
eclipsed in the lifetime of the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him
peace). Allah's Apostle offered the eclipse prayer and stood for a long
period equal to the time in which one could recite Surat-al-Baqara. Then he
bowed for a long time and then stood up for a long period which was
shorter than that of the first standing, then bowed again for a long time
but for a shorter period than the first; then he prostrated twice and
then stood up for a long period which was shorter than that of the first
standing; then he bowed for a long time which was shorter than the
previous one, and then he raised his head and stood up for a long period
which was shorter than the first standing, then he bowed for a long time
which was shorter than the first bowing, and then prostrated (twice)
and finished the prayer. By then, the sun (eclipse) had cleared. The
Prophet then said, "The sun and the moon are two of the signs of Allah.
They eclipse neither because of the death of somebody nor because of his
life (i.e. birth). So when you see them, remember Allah." The people
say, "O Allah's Apostle! We saw you taking something from your place and
then we saw you retreating." The Prophet replied, "I saw Paradise and
stretched my hands towards a bunch (of its fruits) and had I taken it,
you would have eaten from it as long as the world remains. I also saw the
Hell-fire and I had never seen such a horrible sight. I saw that most
of the inhabitants were women." The people asked, "O Allah's Apostle!
Why is it so?" The Prophet replied, "Because of their ungratefulness." It
was asked whether they are ungrateful to Allah. The Prophet said, "They
are ungrateful to their companions of life (husbands) and ungrateful to
good deeds. If you are benevolent to one of them throughout the life
and if she sees anything (undesirable) in you, she will say, 'I have
never had any good from you.' " (Buk 2.161).

Buk 7.125 gives the first part the same as the above, and continues: "I
saw Paradise (or Paradise was shown to me), and I stretched my hand to
pluck a bunch (of grapes), and had I plucked it, you would have eaten
of it as long as this world exists. Then I saw the (Hell) Fire, and I
have never before, seen such a horrible sight as that, and I saw that the
majority of its dwellers were women." The people asked, "O Allah's
Apostle! What is the reason for that?" He replied, "Because of their
ungratefulness." It was said. "Do they disbelieve in Allah (are they
ungrateful to Allah)?" He replied, "They are not thankful to their husbands and
are ungrateful for the favours done to them. Even if you do good to one
of them all your life, when she seems some harshness from you, she will
say, "I have never seen any good from you.' "

Now let us consider the Eid sayings:

Abu Said al-Khudri narrated: Once Allah's Apostle went out to the
Musalla (to offer the prayer) on 'Id-al-Adha or al-Fitr prayer. Then he
passed by the women and said, "O women! Give alms, as I have seen that the
majority of the dwellers of Hell-fire were you (women)." They asked,
"Why is it so, O Allah's Apostle?" He replied, "You curse frequently and
are ungrateful to your husbands. I have not seen anyone more deficient
in intelligence and religion than you. A cautious sensible man could be
led astray by some of you." The women asked, "O Allah's Apostle! What
is deficient in our intelligence and religion?" He said, "Is not the
evidence of two women equal to the witness of one man?" They replied in
the affirmative. He said, "This is the deficiency in her intelligence.
Isn't it true that a woman can neither pray nor fast during her menses?"
The women replied in the affirmative. He said, "This is the deficiency
in her religion." (Bukhari 1.301).

According to Bukhari 2.541 Abu Said al-Khudri narrated: On 'Id ul Fitr
or 'Id ul Adha Allah's Apostle (p.b.u.h) went out to the Musalla. After
finishing the prayer, he delivered the sermon and ordered the people to
give alms. He said, "O people! Give alms." Then he went towards the
women and said. "O women! Give alms, for I have seen that the majority of
the dwellers of Hell-Fire were you (women)." The women asked, "O
Allah's Apostle! What is the reason for it?" He replied, "O women! You curse
frequently, and are ungrateful to your husbands. I have not seen anyone
more deficient in intelligence and religion than you. O women, some of
you can lead a cautious wise man astray." Then he left. And when he
reached his house, Zainab, the wife of Ibn Mas'ud, came and asked
permission to enter it was said, "O Allah's Apostle! It is Zainab." He asked,
"Which Zainab?" The reply was that she was the wife of Ibn Mas'ud. He
said, "Yes, allow her to enter." And she was admitted. Then she said, "O
Prophet of Allah! Today you ordered people to give alms and I had an
ornament and intended to give it as alms, but Ibn Mas'ud said that he and
his children deserved it more than anybody else." The Prophet replied,
"Ibn Mas'ud had spoken the truth. Your husband and your children had
more right to it than anybody else."

In Muslim 31 Abdullah ibn Umar narrated: The Messenger of Allah
observed: O women, you should give charity and ask for much forgiveness for I
saw you in majority amongst the dwellers of Hell. A wise lady among
them said: Why is it, Messenger of Allah, that our gender is in majority
in Hell? Upon this the Holy Prophet observed: You curse too much and are
ungrateful to your spouses. I have seen none lacking in common sense
and failing in religion but (at the same time) robbing the wisdom of the
wise, besides you. Upon this the woman remarked: What is wrong with our
common sense and with religion? He (the Holy prophet) observed: Your
lack of common sense (can be well judged from the fact) that the evidence
of two women is equal to that of one man, that is a proof of the lack
of common sense, and you spend some nights (and days) in which you do
not offer prayer and in the month of Ramadan (during the days) you do not
observe fast, that is a failing in religion. This hadith has been
narrated on the authority of Abu Tahir with this chain of transmitters. See
also Muslim 448.

However, we must make very clear that women not offering prayer during
their menses in the month of Ramadan is NOT a failing in their religion
at all – it was a concession allowed by Allah in His revelation. Women
were simply required to make up the missed days at some other time
before the next Ramadan month.

‘Therefore, anyone of you who witnesses that month should fast therein,
and whoever is ill or upon a journey shall fast a similar number of
days later on. Allah intends your well-being and does not want to put you
to hardship. He wants you to complete the prescribed period so that you
should glorify His Greatness and render thanks to Him for giving you
guidance.’ 2:185:

Imam Malik did not regard travelling as being a good enough reason. ‘No
one who, by the Book of Allah, has to fast may break his fast except
for a reason - illness or menstruation. He must not travel and break his
fast." Malik said, "This is the best that I have heard about the
matter." Al-Muwatta 18:40.

Fiqh as-Sunnah 1.71a: If women fast (while menstruating during
Ramadan), their fasting will be considered null and void. If they fast during
the month of Ramadan, they will still have to make those days of fasting
up later on. Mu'adhah said, "I asked 'Aishah, 'Why must we make up the
fasts missed due to our menstruation, and not the prayers (missed
through menstruation)?' She said, 'That was what the Messenger of Allah told
us to do. We were ordered to make up the fasts, and we were ordered not
to make up the prayers."

As regards the witness of two women being required instead of one, the
shari’ah generally accepts that this is advisable in cases where women
have little knowledge and no expertise of the subject. In matters where
their witness would be just as valid as a man’s, the witness of one
women is sufficient.



Narrated Abu Hurairah: While we were sitting with the Prophet a man
came and said, "O Allah's Apostle! I have been ruined." Allah's Apostle
asked what was the matter with him. He replied "I had sexual intercourse
with my wife while I was fasting." Allah's Apostle asked him, "Can you
afford to manumit a slave?" He replied in the negative. Allah's Apostle
asked him, "Can you fast for two successive months?" He replied in the
negative. The Prophet asked him, "Can you afford to feed sixty poor
persons?" He replied in the negative. The Prophet kept silent and while we
were in that state, a big basket full of dates was brought to the
Prophet . He asked, "Where is the questioner?" He replied, "I (am here)."
The Prophet said (to him), "Take this (basket of dates) and give it in
charity." The man said, "Should I give it to a person poorer than I? By
Allah; there is no family between its (i.e. Medina's) two mountains who
are poorer than I." The Prophet smiled till his premolar teeth became
visible and then said, "Feed your family with it."Bukhari 3.157.

Narrated Abdullah: A Jew came to the Prophet and said, "O Muhammad!
Allah will hold the heavens on a Finger, and the mountains on a Finger,
and the trees on a Finger, and all the creation on a Finger, and then He
will say, 'I am the King.' " On that Allah's Apostle smiled till his
premolar teeth became visible, and then recited: "No just estimate have
they made of Allah such as due to him..." (39.67) 'Abdullah added:
Allah's Apostle smiled (at the Jew's statement) expressing his wonder and
belief in what was said. Bukhari 9.510.

Narrated AbuDharr: Allah's Apostle (peace be upon him) said: I know the
last of the inhabitants of Paradise to enter it and the last of the
inhabitants of Hell to come out of it. He is a man who would be brought on
the Day of Resurrection and it will be said: Present his minor sins to
him, and withhold from him his serious sins. Then the minor sins would
be placed before him, and it would be said: On such and such a day you
did so and so and on such and such a day you did so and so. He would
say: Yes. It will not be possible for him to deny, while he would be
afraid lest serious sins should be presented before him. It would be said
to him: In place of every evil deed you will have good deed He will say:
My Lord! I have done things I do not see here. I indeed saw the
Messenger of Allah laugh till his front teeth were exposed. Muslim 82.

Then he advised them not to laugh when somebody breaks wind and said,
"Why should anybody laugh at what he himself does?" Bukhari 6.466.

Narrated Anas bin Malik: Whenever Allah's Apostle went to Quba, he used
to visit Um Haram bint Milhan who would offer him meals; and she was
the wife of 'Ubada bin As-samit. One day he went to her house and she
offered him a meal, and after that he slept, and then woke up smiling. She
(Um Haram) said, "I asked him, 'What makes you laugh, O Allah's
Apostle?' He said, 'Some people of my followers were displayed before me as
warriors fighting for Allah's Cause and sailing over this sea, kings on
thrones,' or said, 'like kings on thrones.' (The narrator, Ishaq is in
doubt about it). I (Um Haram) said, 'O Allah's Apostle! Invoke Allah
that He may make me one of them.' He invoked (Allah) for her and then lay
his head and slept again and then woke up smiling. I asked, 'What makes
you laugh, O Allah's Apostle?' He said, 'Some people of my followers
were displayed before me as warriors fighting for Allah's Cause and
sailing over this sea, kings on the thrones,' or said, 'like kings on the
thrones.' I (Um Haram) said, 'O Allah's Apostle! Invoke Allah that He may
make me one of them.' He said, 'You will be amongst the first ones.' "
It is said that Um Haram sailed over the sea at the time of Muawiya,
and on coming out of the sea, she fell down from her riding animal and
died." Bukhari 8.299.

Ruqaiyya Waris Maqsood.
 
NS
Re: [ARTICLE] More women in hell?
Kashif
07/22/01 at 11:12:04
assalaamu alaikum

Is this article saying that the ahadith regarding women being the majority in jahannam are just another case of the Prophet's 'dry humour?'

Kashif
Wa Salaam
NS
Re: [ARTICLE] More women in hell?
Kashif
07/22/01 at 20:23:22
[quote]Sometimes the supposed anti-female hadith seems completely untrue. One such hadith was the one that no nation that allowed itself to be ruled by a woman would prosper. This may have been an example of one of the Prophet’s (Allah bless him and give him peace) wry comments, but it is suspect for it was only quoted for the first time by Abu Bakra just before the Battle of Siffin, some thirty years after the Prophet’s (Allah bless him and give him peace) death. The reason was that the troops opposing Caliph Ali were in fact being led by a woman, none other than the Prophet’s (Allah bless him and give him peace) beloved wife Aishah!

The hadith seems in direct opposition to the words of the Qur’an to the ruling Queen of Sheba in the time of the Prophet Sulayman Solomon), who ruled over the most wealthy and well-known people in the history of Arabia. She was asked to accept Islam, but not to give up her rule(Surah 27:23-44).

Indeed, some feel that Abu Bakra’s testimony should be held in doubt
anyway, since he had previously been flogged for a fraudulent statement, and the shari’ah ruling was that after such an offence the person’s word should never again be upheld as reliable in a court of law. However, Abu Bakra was a noble Companion who had converted to Islam from Taif, and who related several hadiths.[/quote]

assalaamu alaikum
I asked around regarding the above extract because i felt it was quite dangerous that this incident without doubt undermines the status of the companions, and i wanted to know if anyone else had heard of this story.

In fact, the only other people who were quoting this incident were people who were either using it to diss Sahih Bukhari, diss the companions in general, and also in one case, to undermine the status of the Sunnah in its entirety.

I would never say that this was the motive behind quoting this incident at all. However, the two responses that i did receive were:

"Jamal ud-deen Zarabozo responds to this allegation in his tapes on the Modernist Movement.

Basically, the modernists make several claims that Abu Bakra was not
reliable, in order to refute this well-known hadith.  As far as I remember, Jamal Zarabozo checked all the books of jarh wa ta'adeel and could not find anything to support their allegations."

----

"I looked for about an hour and a half right now for any weakness in any of the books regarding Abi Bakrah. I found nothing. I didn't find any story about him being whipped either. If you look in the SharH of this Hadeeth, it mentions that it was mentioned by Abi Bakrah in reference to the army led by `Aa'ishah (raDi Allaahu `anha), but there is absolutely no criticism whatsoever. I think that the modernists read the SharH, noticed the timing mentioned by the scholars of Hadeeth, and put a lot of salt and pepper on the story."

Kashif
Wa Salaam
NS
Re: [ARTICLE] More women in hell?
Saleema
07/22/01 at 22:11:26
[slm]

I have heard of that. Abu Bakra *was* flogged by Umar (R) for slandering against someone that two people had committed adultery.

I will post more later.

[wlm]
Saleema
Re: [ARTICLE] More women in hell?
isra
07/22/01 at 22:34:25
[center][img]http://members.nbci.com/isra114/mbm.png[/img][/center]
[center][img]http://members.nbci.com/isra114/hamd1.png[/img][/center]
[img]http://www.jannah.org/board/Images/salam.gif[/img]
I'v heard too, more women as men in Jahannam...Why? Can anyone explain it?
[img]http://www.jannah.org/board/Images/wsalam.gif[/img]
Re: [ARTICLE] More women in hell?
Mehak
07/23/01 at 01:29:46
[slm],
 Dont quote me on this cause I dont have the hadith for reference but I have read that there would be more women in hell cause of:
*dis-obeying their husbands
*back-biting (women are supposed to do it more than men do)
*not paying attention to their hijaab

these are a coupla points I remember. ANd Allah knows best.
[wslm]
Re: [ARTICLE] More women in hell?
Kashif
07/23/01 at 03:20:51
[quote]I have heard of that. Abu Bakra *was* flogged by Umar (R) for slandering against someone that two people had committed adultery.
[/quote]
assalaamu alaikum

Saleema this is the crux of the issue. Remember that we are talking about the people who Allah Himself chose to be the Prophet's companions. Since you have said you will post later, i do hope that you will give me a source from the books on the biographies of narrators or a similar source to prove that Abu Bakra radiallahu 'anhu was flogged by Umar.

jazkillahu khair

Kashif
Wa Salaam

PS I'll try to post the interpretation of the hadith by Sh. Umar al-Ashqar's book this evening inshallah.
NS
Re: [ARTICLE] More women in hell?
Kashif
07/23/01 at 21:21:41
assalaamu alaikum

As an addendum to the discussion regarding the sahabi Abu Bakrah and the allegations against him, a brother informed me:

>>
I think I have found where they may have gotten that Abu Bakrah was a weak narrator of Hadeeth and a liar who was whipped. They are talking about the WRONG ONE.

I went to my father's house and looked through Taqreeb at-Tahtheeb and found in Baab al Kunnaa that Abu Bakrah's name is Nufay` ibn al-Haarith. So I looked up Nufay` ibn al-Haarith and there are TWO. One is the SaHaabi Abu Bakrah Nufay` ibn al-Haarith and the other is Abu Dawud Nufay` ibn al-Haarith. Of course the one we are discussing is Abu Bakrah Nufay` ibn al-Haarith and this is what it says about him:

"SaHaabi. Most known by his 'kunya'...He became Muslim in Taa'if, he later went to Basrah and died there."

note: When Imam ibn Hajar says "Companion" that means they are absolutely "thiqqah" (reliable) without dispute.

Now RIGHT UNDER that it has the OTHER Nufay` ibn al-Haarith about whom it says:

"Nufay` ibn al-Haarith, Abu Dawood al-A`mi, known by his 'kunya', A Kufi who was called 'Naafi`', He is rejected (Matrook) and ibn Ma`een declared him a liar."
<<

Kashif
Wa Salaam
NS


Individual posts do not necessarily reflect the views of Jannah.org, Islam, or all Muslims. All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners. Comments are owned by the poster and may not be used without consent of the author.
The rest © Jannah.Org