[x] Close ad

SAHABA

Part of a series of articles on

Islam

History of Islam

Beliefs and practices

Oneness of God
Profession of Faith
PrayerFasting
PilgrimageCharity

Major figures

Muhammad

Abu BakrAli
Household of Muhammad
Companions of Muhammad
Prophets of Islam

Texts & Laws

Qur'anSunnahHadith
JurisprudenceTheology
Biographies of Muhammad
Sharia

Branches of Islam

SunniShi'aKharijite

Societal aspects

AcademicsHistory
PhilosophyScience
ArtArchitectureCities
CalendarHolidays
Womenin the Qu'ran
LeadersPolitics
IslamismLiberalismSufism

See also

Vocabulary of Islam
anti-Islam sentiment

Part of a series on
Prophets, salaf & caliphs:

Prophets of Islam


Ahl al-Bayt
Muhammad's wives


Sahaba
Tabi'een
Taba al-Tabi'een


Caliph

 v·d·e 
Imams

In Islam, the Ṣaḥābah (Arabic: الصحابة) were the companions of Muhammad. This form is plural; the singular is Ṣaḥābi (fem. Sahabiyyah), which is Arabic for "friend, companion." A list of the best-known companions can be found at List of companions of Muhammad.

Contents

Definitions of companion

Most Muslims regard anyone who knew or saw Muhammad, believed in his teachings, and died as a Muslim to be a companion or Ṣahābi. Lists of prominent companions usually run to fifty or sixty names, being the people most closely associated with Muhammad. However, there were clearly many others who had some contact with Muhammad. Many of them were identified by later scholars, and their names and biographies were recorded in religious reference texts such as Muhammad ibn Sa'd's early Kitāb at-Tabāqat al-Kabīr.

It was important to identify the companions because later scholars accepted their testimony (the hadith, or traditions) as to the words and deeds of Muhammad, the occasions on which the Qur'an was revealed, and various important matters of Islamic history and practice (sunnah). The testimony of the companions, as it was passed down through chains of trusted narrators (isnads), was the basis of the developing Islamic tradition.

Other links in the chain of isnad

Because the hadith were not written down until many years after the death of Muhammad, the isnads, or chains of transmission, always have several links. The first link is preferably a companion, who had direct contact with Muhammad. The companion then related the tradition to a taba'een, the companion of the companion. Taba'een had no direct contact with Muhammad, but did have direct contact with the Ṣahāba. The tradition then would have been passed from the taba'een to the taba taba'een, the third link.

The second and third links in the chain of transmission were also of great interest to Muslim scholars, who treated of them in biographical dictionaries and evaluated them for bias and reliability. Again, Shi'a and Sunni apply different metrics.

Views of the companions

Soon after Muhammad's death the Muslim community, the ummah, was riven by conflicts over leadership. Companions took sides in the conflicts – or were forced to take sides – and later scholars considered their allegiances in weighing their testimony. The two largest Muslim denominations, the Shia and Sunni take very different approaches in weighing the value of the companions' testimony.

"May God be pleased with him" (Arabic: Radhi-Allah-hu 'anhu رضي الله عنه) is usually mentioned after the names of the Sahaba.

Sunni views

Scene from the film The Message depicting the Muslim army at the Battle of Badr.
Scene from the film The Message depicting the Muslim army at the Battle of Badr.

According to Sunni scholars, people of the past should be considered companions if they had any kind of contact with Muhammad. If they saw him, heard him, or were in his presence even briefly, they are companions. Blind people are considered companions even if they could not see Muhammad. Even unlearned and unobservant Muslims are considered companions. However, anyone who died after rejecting Islam and becoming an apostate is not considered a companion.

Sunni Muslim scholars classified companions into many categories, based on a number of criteria. Suyuti recognized eleven levels of companionship. However, all companions are considered just (udul); that is, Sunni scholars do not believe that companions would lie or fabricate hadith.

Shi'a views

Shi'a Muslims do not accept all companions as just. The Shi'a believe that after the death of Muhammad, most Muslims turned aside from true Islam and followed leaders like the first caliphs, Abu Bakr and Umar. Only a few of the early Muslims held fast to Ali ibn Abi Talib, whom Shi'a Muslims regard as the rightful successor to Muhammad. (See Succession to Muhammad) Shi'a scholars therefore deprecate hadith believed to have been transmitted through unjust companions, and place much more reliance on hadith believed to have been related by companions who supported Ali.


Numbers of companions

Some Muslims assert that there were more than one hundred thousand companions. They do so in relation to the hadith known as Ghadir Khumm, regarding a sermon Muhammad is said to have delivered after making his last pilgrimage, or Hajj, to Mecca. Shi'a Muslims believe that there were about 124,000 witnesses to this sermon [1], which would emphasize the gravity and official nature of this alleged speech appointing Ali ibn Abi Talib as Muhammad's successor. Nearly all Sunni sources accept the hadith, but do not interpret it as do the Shi'a and therefore do not attach significance to the event. Some Sunni sources additionally accept the Shi'a crowd estimates.

See also

Related to hadith:

Related to Muhammad's family:


References

  1. ^ To be with the truthful by Muhammad al-Tijani on Al-Islam.org [1]

also:

External links


List of Sahaba
Abbad ibn Bishr • `Abbas ibn `Abd al-Muttalib • Abd al-Rahman ibn Sakhr • `Abd Allah ibn `Abbas • `Abd Allah ibn `Abd al-Asad • Abd-Allah ibn Mas'ud • Abd-Allah ibn Sailam • Abd-Allah ibn Ubaiy • Abd-Allah ibn Umm-Maktum • Abd-Allah ibn al-Zubayr • Abd ar-Rahman ibn Abi Bakr • Abdullah ibn Hudhafah as-Sahmi • Abdullah ibn Ja'far • Abdullah ibn Sailam • Abu Ayyub al-Ansari • Abu Bakr • Abu Dharr al-Ghifari • Abu Dujana • Abu Fuhayra • Abu Hudhaifah ibn al-Mughirah • Abu Sufyan ibn Harb • Abu Sufyan ibn al-Harith • Abu Talib ibn Abd al-Muttalib • Abu Ubaidah ibn al-Jarrah • Abu al-Aas ibn al-Rabiah • Abu al-Dardaa • Abu-Hudhayfah ibn Utbah • Abu-Musa al-Asha'ari • Abu-Sa'id al-Khudri • Akib ibn Usaid • Al-Ala'a Al-Hadrami • Al-Baraa ibn Malik al-Ansari • Al-Nahdiah • Ali • Aminah bint Wahab • Ammar ibn Yasir • Amr ibn al-Jamuh • An-Numan ibn Muqarrin • Anas ibn Malik • Ashaab • Bashir ibn Sa'ad • Bilal ibn Ribah • Bilal ibn al-Harith • Fadl ibn Abbas • Fatima bint Asad • Fatima bint Hizam • Fayruz al-Daylami • Habibah bint Ubayd-Allah • Halima Sadia • Hamza ibn 'Abdul Muttalib • Harithah bint al-Muammil • Hatib ibn Abi Baitah • Hisham ibn Al-Aas • Hudhayfah ibn al-Yaman • Hujr ibn Adi • Julaybib • Khabbab ibn al-Aratt • Khalid ibn Sa`id • Khunais ibn Hudhaifa • Kumayl ibn Ziyad • Layla bint al-Minhal • Lubaba bint al-Harith • Lubaynah • Malik Bin Deenar • Malik al-Dar • Malik ibn Ashter • Malik ibn Nuwayrah • Masaab ibn Umayr • Miqdad ibn Aswad • Muadh ibn Jabal • Mughira ibn Shu'ba • Muhammad Ibn Maslamah • Muhammad ibn Abi Bakr • Muhammad ibn Maslamah • Nawfal ibn Khuwaylid • Qatadah • Rab'ah ibn Umayah • Rabi'ah ibn al-Harith • Sa`ad ibn ar-Rabi` • Sa`ad ibn Abi Waqqas • Saffiyah binte Abd-al-Muttalib • Said ibn Aamir al-Jumahi • Salim Mawla Abu Hudhayfah • Salman the Persian • Suhayb ar-Rumi • Ubaydah ibn al-Harith • Umamah bint Zainab • Umar • Umm Khultum bint Ali • Umm Khultum bint Jarweela Khuzeema • Umm Shareek • Umm Ubays • `Uqbah ibn Amir • Urwah ibn Mas'ud • Usama ibn Zayd • Utbah ibn Ghazwan • Wahb ibn Abd Manaf • Zayd ibn Arqam • Zayd ibn Harithah • Zayd ibn Thabit • Zaynab bint Ali • `Abd Allah ibn Rawahah