

Malik ibn Dinar: Aik Maldar Shakhs Ki Tauba
Husband And Wife On The Path To Allah
Being human, we all have shortcomings, and we all make mistakes, and after marriage, our mistakes and sins do hurt our spouse. When I first started studying the Deen of Islam in-depth, I harbored an almost ‘awestruck’ respect and reverence of practicing, religious Muslims; the way a teenaged, star-struck fan admires a popular celebrity in modern-day pop culture.
The idyllic picture of their personal lives that I’d painted in my naive young brain was based on my admiration of their lofty morals.
I assumed that the more righteous a person was, the more perfect and discord-free their personal and family life would be. I presumed that they would never have any disagreements with other Muslims, much less with their close family members.
More than a decade later, today, I know better, both because of my personal life experience and as a result of gaining some knowledge of Islam since those bygone days of youthful naiveté.
w I’d like to share some of the truthful facts about the marriages and family lives of righteous Muslims that Allah has allowed me to glean through the study of His Book and of the seerah of Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him), including the lives of some of his companions.
Fighting & Differences
I have learnt that, even if both a husband and wife are very righteous and Allah-fearing, it is not possible for their married life to be devoid of differences and the occasional fighting.
A happy marriage between two righteous people does not mean a complete absence of fighting and disagreements between them, nor is it true that neither spouse will never dislike something about the other.
After marriage, every husband-wife duo will have to live through some days in which they are very angry at their partner; ticked off about something the latter did or said.
Being human, we all have shortcomings, and we all make mistakes, and after marriage, our mistakes and sins do hurt our spouse – the one person who lives with us day in and day out.
Several examples of this glaring reality of marriage viz. the presence of disagreements between righteous husbands and wives are present in the Quran and Sunnah.
The first example is that of Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) and his wives, when he once became so angry at them all, that he vowed to not speak to or visit any of them for a month. This incident created quite a furor in Madinah and shows us that, even though the Prophet and his wives were the most righteous of this ummah, and all of them were destined for Jannah, their married lives were not without the occasional fights and undercurrents of anger.
There were even days when the Prophet’s wives got upset with him, as proved by another relevant hadith that mentions how, during such times, when Aisha daughter of Abu Bakr would be upset with her husband, she’d swear by Allah by saying, “By the Lord of Ibrahim”, instead of, “By the Lord of Muhammad”, the latter being her normal preference… Another narration mentions how his wife Hafsah bint Umar admitted to not talking to him sometimes during the day, in front of her father `Umar (may Allah be pleased with them all).
Another famous incident quoted in sahih ahadith, mentions how Ali ibn Abi Talib got his nickname ‘Abu Turab’ from his father-in-law, the Prophet (PBUH). Ali once left his home in a huff after a disagreement with his wife, Fatimah (RA) daughter of Muhammad (may Allah be pleased with them both), and lay down on the dusty masjid floor so that some of his clothes/body got covered in dust.
This indicates how the happy marriage of Ali (RA) and Fatimah (RA), one of the most righteous married couples in Islamic history, was not devoid of disagreements either.
An important point to note about this incident is that even though the Prophet clearly saw that Ali (RA) was angry, he lovingly called him by a nickname (perhaps to appease him), which means that the older, close family members of the quarreling married couple (especially their parents and parents-in-law) should not make a big hullabaloo about their occasional trivial tiffs unless the fighting gets serious in nature.
Hardship & Scarcity of Resources
The next fact based on real life, which my studies of the Quran and Sunnah have taught me over the years, about marriages between righteous couples, is that they are almost always tested by the afflictions of hunger, hardship, and/or straitened economic circumstances.
It is true that Prophet Muhammad deliberately chose to live a life of poverty, despite having full access to worldly resources that could allow him to live like a rich king (especially later on in his life), and all his wives supported him in this choice.
Allah had actually revealed Quranic verses offering his wives a choice: either they choose Allah and (staying married to) His Messenger whilst living in hardship, or they go for the luxuries of this worldly life. They all unanimously chose the latter, without hesitation.
However, there are other examples too. The Quran has made praiseworthy mention of a Muslim couple during the time of the Prophet, who honored and cared for their unexpected overnight guest to such a degree, that they both agreed to sacrifice the only single meal in their house that night, which was reserved just for their children, in order to serve it to their guest. They turned off the lamp before eating so that their guest would not find out that they were not eating anything.
Sahih Muslim has also recorded a narration about this incident… The Arabic word that Allah uses in the Quran to describe their situation is “khasasah”, which means, poverty, or dire need.
Whichever era in the time since Islam came to this world, one constant thing that I have observed in the biographical accounts of the lives of our pious predecessors (al-salaf al-salih) is that they endured poverty and hunger.
Young singles of this ummah who wish to marry someone righteous and henceforth live a life upon the Deen of Islam should therefore be forewarned that the trial of hunger and poverty might come from Allah as a test of their marriage, but to recall that, as it is the Sunnah of Prophet Muhammad, it has a lot of good in it.
If the husband and wife can weather this trial with patience and righteousness, they will emerge from it stronger and closer to Allah, both as a couple as well as individuals, In Sha Allah.
Separation by Long Distance
The path to Jannah is thorny, but with a righteous spouse by one’s side, it becomes easier.
Lastly, yet another trying experience that many real-life marriages endure, especially those between righteous couples, is being separated for a long time in the path/for the sake of Allah.
Many a time, if her husband is a da’ee who is actively involved in the propagation of Allah’s Deen, a wife will have to endure days, weeks if not months, or years without him at home, living either with his extended family or just with her children, alone, busy raising their next generation.
However, it is not just du’at whose marriages are tested by the separation of husband and wife for a long time. Sometimes, when the husband loses his job (which happens a lot, in many marriages, cue point number two above) and the family is direly in need of an income, the only job offer that Allah might send his way could be in another city or country.
However, modern government-enforced visa and immigration restrictions as well as other factors related to the schooling/upbringing of their children, sometimes prevent a wife from joining her husband in the other country where he works, leading to weeks if not months of separation, which takes a toll on their marriage.
The prime example of this in Islamic history, when a righteous couple endured a trying separation for the sake of Allah, is that of Prophet Ibrahim (peace be upon him) and his wife Hajar. He left her and their infant son Ismael in the barren and desolate valley of Makkah, at the command of Allah, so that it could eventually become inhabited and the house of Allah could be built there.
Any modern-day Muslim couple who wishes to marry a righteous person and eventually live a married life according to superlative levels of taqwa, piety, and faith, should recall the marital challenges faced by our pious predecessors and how they faced the difficulties after getting married with exemplary patience (sabr).
The path to Jannah is thorny, but with a righteous spouse by one’s side, it becomes easier to tread than when trodden alone.
By Sadaf Farooqi
- April, 15
- 3391
- Human Rights
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Umm Ziyad RA Ki Chand Aurton Kay Sath Khyber Mein Shirkat

Umm Ziyad RA Ki Chand Aurton Kay Sath Khyber Mein Shirkat
Wise Sayings From Quran
1) Say, “O My servants who have transgressed against themselves [by sinning], do not despair of the mercy of Allah. Indeed, Allah forgives all sins. Indeed, it is He who is the Forgiving, the Merciful. [Az-Zumar 39-53]
2) Wealth and children are [but] adornment (attraction) of the worldly life. But the enduring (everlasting) good deeds are better to your Lord for reward and better for [one’s] hope.[Al-Kahf 18:46]
3) Repel [evil] by that [deed] which is better; and thereupon, the one whom between you and him is enmity [will become] as though he was a devoted friend. [Fussilat 41:34]
4) And peace will be upon he who follows the guidance. [Ta-Ha 20:47]
5) The believers are only those who, when Allah is mentioned, their hearts become fearful, and when His verses are recited to them, it increases them in faith; and upon their Lord they rely. [Al-Anfal 8:2-4]
6) That you not transgress (deceit) within the balance. And establish weight in justice and do not make deficient the balance. [Ar-Rahman 55:8-9] (While selling, man should weigh things honestly)
7) Whom Allah leaves astray, you will never find for them protectors besides Him, and We will gather them on the Day of Resurrection [fallen] on their faces – blind, dumb, and deaf. Their refuge is Hell; every time it subsides We increase them in blazing fire. [Al-Isra 17:97]
8) And whoever turns away from My remembrance – indeed, he will have a depressed [i.e., difficult] life, and We will gather [i.e., raise] him on the Day of Resurrection blind.” He will say, “My Lord, why have you raised me blind while I was [once] seeing?” [Allah] will say, “Thus did Our signs come to you, and you forgot [i.e., disregarded] them; and thus will you this Day be forgotten” [Ta-Ha 20:124-126]
9) And when it is said to them, “Follow what Allah has revealed,” they say, “Rather, we will follow that upon which we found our fathers.” Even if Satan was inviting them to the punishment of the Blaze? [Luqman 31:21]
10) And Allah invites to the Home of Peace [i.e., Paradise] and guides whom He wills to a straight path. [Yunus 10:25]
11) They [think to] deceive Allah and those who believe, but they deceive not except themselves and perceive [it] not. [Al-Baqarah 2:9]
12) O mankind, indeed the promise of Allah is true, So let not the worldly life delude (deceive) you, and let not the chief deceiver [i.e., Satan] deceive you about Allah. [Fatir 35:5]
13) Indeed, As-Salat (prayer) has been enjoined upon the believers at specified times. [Quran Chapter An-Nisa 4:103]
14) Indeed, the Day of Judgment is an appointed time (fixed time). [Quran An-Naba 78:17]
Naik Aur Bad Ki Rooh Nikalne Ka Farq

Naik Aur Bad Ki Rooh Nikalne Ka Farq
Allah Is With The Patient
[103. Surah Al-Asr: Ayah 1-3] “By the declining day, Lo! Man is a state of loss, save those who believe and do good works, and exhort one another to truth and exhort one another to endurance.”
[2. Surah Al-Baqarah: Ayah 45-46] “And seek assistance through patience and prayer, and most surely it is a hard thing except for the humble ones, Who know that they shall meet their Lord.”
[2. Surah Al-Baqarah: Ayah 153] “O you who believe! Seek assistance through patience and prayer; surely Allah is with the patient.”
[2. Surah Al-Baqarah: Ayah 155] “And We will most certainly try you with somewhat of fear and hunger and loss of property and lives and fruits, and give good news to the patient.”
[2. Surah Al-Baqarah: Ayah 156] “Who, when a misfortune befalls them, say: Surely we are Allah’s and to Him, we shall surely return.”
[2. Surah Al-Baqarah: Ayah 157] “Those are they on whom are blessings and mercy from their Lord, and those are the followers of the right course.”
[2. Surah Al-Baqarah: Ayah 249] “Allah is with the patient.”
[33. Surah Al-Ahzab: Ayah 35] “Surely the men who submit and the women who submit, and the believing men and the believing women, and the obeying men and the obeying women, and the truthful men and the truthful women, and the patient men and the patient women and the humble men and the humble women, and the almsgiving men and the almsgiving women, and the fasting men and the fasting women, and the men who guard their private parts and the women who guard, and the men who remember Allah much and the women who remember– Allah has prepared for them forgiveness and a mighty reward.”
Asr Ki Namaz Kay Fazail Aur Masail



Asr Ki Namaz Kay Fazail Aur Masail
Allah’s Revelation To Bee
[16. Surah Nahl: Ayah 68-69] “And your Lord revealed to the bee saying: Make hives in the mountains and in the trees and in what they build. Then eat of all the fruits and walk in the ways of your Lord submissively. There comes forth from within it a beverage of many colors, in which there is healing for men; most surely there is a sign in this for a person who reflects.”
[Sahih Bukhari: Volume 7, Book 71, Number 582] Narrated Abu Huraira (Radi Allah Anhu): The Prophet Muhammad (sal-allahu-alleihi-wasallam) said, “There is no disease that Allah has sent down, except that He also has sent down its treatment.”
[Sahih Bukhari: Volume 7, Book 71, Number 584] Narrated Ibn Abbas (Radi Allah Anhu): The Prophet Muhammad (sal-allahu-alleihi-wasallam) said, “Healing is in three things: cupping, a gulp of honey or cauterization (branding with fire) but I forbid my followers to use cauterization (branding with fire).”
[Sahih Bukhari: Volume 7, Book 71, Number 588] Narrated Abu Said Al-Khudri (Radi Allah Anhu): A man came to Prophet Muhammad (sal-allahu-alleihi-wasallam) and said, ” My brother has abdominal trouble.” The Prophet Muhammad (sal-allahu-alleihi-wasallam) said to him “Let him drink honey.” He returned again and said that I had done that but nothing changed. The Prophet Muhammad (sal-allahu-alleihi-wasallam) said, “Allah has said the truth, but your abdomen has told a lie. Let him drink honey.” So he made him drink honey and he was cured.
Tauba Ki Haqeeqat


Tauba Ki Haqeeqat
In Search Of The Prophet
I found my source of adoration for you in the love and respect that the Almighty has proclaimed for you; in the honor that He bestowed upon you; in His confirmation of you as “the ultimate exemplar”; “seal of Prophets” and “mercy unto all existence”.
O Prophet of Allah, where shall I find the source of my adoration for you? I have memorized hundreds of your sayings since my youth, taught your seerah (example) to numerous students, grown a beard, used the miswaak, sang, and proudly taught others odes (qasidahs) in praise of you. But I did not find you in these rituals nor did any of these make me anymore like you; rather they merely flung me into the fray of insignificant debates in the arena of so many of the sunnahless Muslims who see your Sunnah only as an endless array of harsh laws and practices or as some justification for their cultural tendencies. O Allah, save me from being of those who consider the Sunnah of Thy beloved as being expressed only through aimless imitations and who know Thy Prophet only as a conveyor of commands and warnings. O Prophet of Allah, I did not truly find you in the books of fatawa (religious edicts), nor in grand seminars and conferences throughout the world, and certainly not in the harsh arguments between groups proclaiming mutually exclusive rights over you. I found my source of adoration for you in the love and respect that the Almighty has proclaimed for you; in the honor that He bestowed upon you; in His confirmation of you as “the ultimate exemplar”; “seal of Prophets” and “mercy unto all existence”. Allah has elevated the very memory of you and has made His boundless love accessible through obedience to you. I catch but a dimension of you through the instances of compassion you extended to others; how you played with the poor orphaned boy when other children refused to play with him, how you prolonged your prostration out of consideration that your change in posture may inconvenience or hurt your beloved grandson who had climbed on your back; how you blessed with Paradise the sinful woman for saving the life of a cat by making the water of the well accessible with her shoes; how you intervened and prevented a man from abusing his wife by teaching him that “the best of men are those who treat their wives the best”; how you patched your clothes, mended your shoes and did your daily household chores; how you wrestled with your nephew and raced with your wife; how you joked with the kids and carried the baggage of the elderly; how you hosted the Christians of Najran in your mosque and stood up to honor the bier of a Jew. O Prophet of Allah, why is it that so many of us who claim to be of you refuse to be like you. We sing for you and dress like you, but do not come near fulfilling the expression of love, care, and beauty that is generated from yourself. Why is it that we see in you that which suits our cultural, organizational, and chauvinistic interests, yet ignore the essence of what is essential to your being. Others who are not of you proclaim the multidimensional and multi-faceted nature of your personality. “The personality of Muhammad is most difficult to get the whole truth of it. Only a glimpse of him I can catch. What dramatic succession of picturesque scenes? There is Muhammad (PBUH) the Prophet; there is Muhammad (PBUH) the General; Muhammad (PBUH) the King; Muhammad (PBUH) the Warrior; Muhammad (PBUH) the Businessman; Muhammad (PBUH) the Preacher; Muhammad (PBUH) the Philosopher; Muhammad (PBUH) the Statesman; Muhammad (PBUH) the Orator; Muhammad (PBUH) the Reformer; Muhammad (PBUH) the Refuge of Orphans; Muhammad (PBUH) the Protector of Slaves; Muhammad (PBUH) the Emancipator of Women; Muhammad (PBUH) the Judge; Muhammad (PBUH) the Saint… In all these magnificent roles and all these departments of human activities, he is equally a hero.” (Professor Ramakrishna Rao). O Prophet! Your life example is an integrated biography, history, and law; it is above all a model of excellence. O Prophet of Allah, you have certainly been adored by many much more worthy than I. Yet, neither the inability to capture my appreciation of you with the eloquence of poets nor my weakness as a believer debars me from qualifying as one who adores you; for in the commemoration of your being do I find the dignity and honor of my existence.
Sadullah Khan

