Umm Habiba Ramla bint Abu Sufyan, may
Allah be pleased with her, in fact married the Prophet Muhammad (peace
and blessings of Allah be upon him) in 1 AH, although she did not
actually come to live with him in Medina until 7 AH, when the Prophet
was sixty years old and she was thirty-five. Umm Habiba was the daughter
of Abu Sufyan, who for some of his life was one of the most resolute
enemies of the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him)
spending much of his great wealth in opposing the Muslims, and leading
the armies of the kafirun against the Muslims in all the early major
battles, including the battles of Badr, Uhud and al-Khandaq. Indeed it
was not until the conquest of Mecca, when the Prophet generously
pardoned him, that Abu Sufyan embraced Islam and began to fight with the
Muslims instead of against them.
Umm Habiba and her first husband, who was called
Ubaydullah ibn Jahsh, the brother of Zaynab bint Jahsh, were among the
first people to embrace Islam in Mecca, and they were among those early
Muslims who emigrated to Abyssinia in order to be safe. Once in
Abyssinia, however, Ubaydullah abandoned Islam and became a Christian.
He tried to make her become Christian, but she stood fast. This put Umm
Habiba in a difficult position, since a Muslim woman can only be married
to be a Muslim man. She could no longer live with her husband, and once
they had been divorced, she could not return to her father, who was
still busy fighting the Muslims. So she remained with her daughter in
Abyssinia, living a very simple life in isolation, waiting to see what
Allah would decree for her.
One day, as Umm Habiba sat in her solitary room, a
stranger in a strange land far from her home, a maidservant knocked on
her door and said that she had been sent by the Negus who had a message
for her. The message was that the Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings
of Allah be upon him) had asked for her hand in marriage, and that if
she accepted this proposal that she was to name one of the accepted this
proposal then she was to name one of the Muslims in Abyssinia as her
wakil, so that the marriage ceremony could take place in Abyssinia even
though she was not in the same place as the Prophet. Naturally Umm
Habiba was overjoyed and accepted immediately. "Allah has given you good
news! Allah has give you good news!" she cried, pulling off what little
jewelry she had and giving it to the smiling girl. She asked her to
repeat the message three times since she could hardly believe her ears.
Soon after this, all the Muslims who had sought refuge
in Abyssinia were summoned to the palace of the Negus to witness the
simple marriage ceremony in which the on the Prophet's behalf and her
wakil, Khalid ibn Sa'id ibn al-As, acting on her behalf. When the
marriage was finalized, the Negus addressed the gathering with these
words:
"I praise Allah, the Holy, and I declare that there is
no god but Allah and that Muhammad is His servant and His messenger and
that He gave the good news to Jesus the son of Mary.
"The Messenger of Allah (peace and blessings of Allah be
upon him) requested me to conclude the marriage contract between him
and Umm Habiba, the daughter of Abu Sufyan. I agreed to do what he
requested, and on his behalf I give her a dowry of four hundred gold
dinars." The Negus handed over the amount to Khalid ibn Sa'id who stood
up and said:
"All praise is due to Allah. I praise Him and I seek His
help and forgiveness and I turn to Him in repentance. I bear witness
that Muhammad is His servant and His Messenger whom He has sent with the
deen of guidance and truth so that it may prevail over all other
religions, however much those who reject dislike this. "I agreed to do
what the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) requested
and acted as the wakil on behalf of Umm Habiba, the daughter of Abu
Sufyan. May Allah bless His Messenger and his wife. Congratulations to
Umm Habiba for the goodness which Allah has decreed for her."
Khalid took the dowry and handed it over to Umm Habiba.
Thus although she could not travel to Arabia straight away, she was
provided for by the Prophet, (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him)
from the moment and that they were married. The Muslims who had
witnessed the marriage contract were just about to leave, when the Negus
said to them, "Sit down, for it is the practice of the Prophets to
serve food at marriages." Joyfully everyone sat down again to eat and
celebrate the happy occasion. Umm Habiba especially could hardly believe
her good fortune, and she later described how eager she was to share
her happiness, saying: "When I received the money as my dowry, I sent
fifty mithqals of gold to the servant girl who had first brought me the
good news, and I said to her, 'I gave you what I did when you gave me
the good news because at that time I did not have any money at all.'
"Shortly afterwards, she came to me and returned the
gold. She also produced a case which contained the necklace I had given
to her and gave it to me, saying, 'The Negus has instructed me not to
take anything from you, and he has commanded the women in his household
to present you with gifts of perfume.'
"On the following day, she brought me ambergris, saffron and aloes wood oil and said, 'I have a favor to ask of you.'
'"What is it?' I asked.
'"I have accepted Islam,' she replied, 'and now I
followed the deen of Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon
him). Please convey my greetings of peace to him, and let him know that I
believe in Allah and His Prophet. Please do not forget.'"
Six years later, in 7 AH, when the emigrant Muslims in
Abyssinia were finally able to return to Arabia, Umm Habiba came to
Medina and there the Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be
upon him), who had just returned victorious from Khaybar, warmly
welcomed her. Umm Habiba relates: "When I met the Prophet (peace and
blessings of Allah be upon him), I told him all about the arrangements
that had been made for the marriage, and about my relationship with the
girl. I told him that she had become a Muslim and conveyed her greetings
of peace to him. He was filled with joy at the news and said, 'Wa
alayha as salam wa rahmatullaahi wa barakaatuh' - 'And on her be the
peace and the mercy of Allah and His blessing.'"
The strength of Umm Habiba' s character can be measured
by what happened shortly before the conquest of Mecca, when her father,
Abu Sufyan, came to Medina after the Quraish had broken the treaty of
Hudaybiyya, in order to try and re-negotiate a fresh settlement with the
Prophet Muhammad and the Muslims. He first went to Umm Habiba's room
and was about to sit down on the blanket on which the Prophet (peace and
blessings of Allah be upon him) slept when Umm Habiba, who had not seen
her father for over six years, asked him not to sit on it and quickly
folded it up and put it away. "Am I too good for the bed, or it is the
bed too good for me?" he asked. "how can the enemy of Islam sit on the
bed of the Holy Prophet?" she replied.
It was only after Abu Sufyan had embraced Islam, after
the conquest of Mecca, and had become the enemy of the enemies of Islam,
that Umm Habiba accepted and loved him again as her father. When she
received the news that her father and brother Mu'awiya, who later became
the Khalif of the Muslims, had become Muslims after the conquest, she
fell down in prostration to Allah out of thankfulness. Umm Habiba spent
four years of her life with the Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings of
Allah be upon him) and lived for another thirty-three years after he
had died, dying at the age of seventy-two in 44 AH, may Allah be pleased
with her.
Like all the wives of the Prophet (peace and blessings
of Allah be upon him) Umm Habiba spent much of her time remembering
Allah and worshipping Him. She has related that once the Prophet (peace
and blessings of Allah be upon him) said to her, "A house will be built
in the Garden for anyone who, in the space of a day and a night, prays
twelve voluntary rak'ats;" and she added, "I have never stopped doing
this since I it from the Messenger of Allah (peace and blessinof Allah
be upon him).
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