Sa'd ibn Mua'dh

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Sa’d ibn Mu'adh was a chief of the Banu Aus tribe in Yathrib. He later converted to Islam after the coming of Muhammad.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] 622: Islam

Sa'ad adopted Islam in 1 AH (622), when Muhammad arrived to Medina, then known as Yathrib. He was among the leading figures among the Ansar, as Muhammad had dubbed the Medinan converts to Islam.

Sa'd was an intimate friend with Umayah ibn Khalaf [1]. When Sa'd was in Mecca, he used to stay with Umayah, and when Umayah was in Medina, he used to stay with Sa'd [1].


Prior to the Battle of Badr, Sa’d had visited Mecca once to perform his Umra with his non-Muslim friend Umayah ibn Khalaf, when they came across Abu Jahl. They had an argument, and as it became heated, Sa'd threatened Abu Jahl with stopping the Meccan trade route to Syria and informed Umayah that his life was threatened by Muhammad [1].

[edit] 627: Siege of the Banu Qurayza

Sa'd was in Medina when the Meccan army sieged Medina with 10 000 men 5 AH (626627). During that event, he wsa was mortally wounded.

After the Meccan alliance left Medina unsuccessfully, the Muslims sieged Banu Qurayza, since they had plotted with the Meccans [2]. The Banu Qurayza surrendered unconditionally after several weeks of siege. Several members of the Banu Aus pleaded for their old allies and Sa'd as one of their chiefs was appointed judge in this matter. He decreed that all adult male members of the tribe should be killed and all women and children enslaved.


[edit] Death

Sa'd died shortly after his verdict.

William Muir, a 20th century non-Muslim Islamic scholar writes:

[edit] Legacy

[edit] Muslim view

He dutifully served as a member of the Muslim community and even commandeered military campaigns for the Prophet during his lifetime. Saad is said to have been a stern and passionate man, willing to impulsively fight for what he believed in. In Muslim history, he is well-regarded as a noble companion who enjoyed a close relationship with the Prophet.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Sahih Bukhari 5:59:286
  2. ^ a b A Life of Mahomet and History of Islam to the Era of the Hegira, volume 3, page.
  3. ^ William Muir adds: Accounts greatly vary, as usual. Some make Sad to have been taken by his tribe from the tent to his home, where he became very ill, and died. Others say that the wound broke out in the tent, into which Mahomet hurried, and clasping the dying man was covered with his blood. Others again hold that Gabriel appeared at midnight, and announced the death of Sad to Mahomet, who hastened to his bedside and round that he had just died. The tale of Sad is surrounded with supernatural associations. For instance, when Mahomet went to be present at the washing of the body, he walked so rapidly that the people could scarcely keep up with him : - "You would have thought the thongs of their sandals would have broken, and their mantles fallen from their shoulders, they hurried so fast." when they asked the reason, he replied: "Verily, I fear lest the Angels should reach his house before us, as they got before us unto Hantzala; " - alluding to the burial of the latter, and the supposed washing of his corpse by the angels. Then there are numerous legends about the angels crowding into the room where the corpse was laid out, and one of them spreading out his wing for Mahomet to sit upon. K. Wackidi, 204. See Inrod. vol. i. p. lxv. I believe all these traditions to hang upon the reply of Mahomet as given below to the Disaffected, viz. that the bier was light, because supported by a crowd of Angels.
  4. ^ William Muir adds: This is the passage to which I have alluded in a previous note, p.282. The death of Sad followed so immediately on his sanguinary judgment, that the Disaffected could hardly avoid coupling the two together. To avert this inference, it is pretended in tradition that Sad prayed thus, - "O Lord! If thou hast in store any further fighting with the Coreish, then preserve me to take part in it: but if thou hast put an end to their warning against thy Prophet, then take me unto Thyself!" - which when he prayed, be was to all appearance well, the wound presenting only a slight cicatrised ring. But shortly after he was carried to the tent, and died. Although, in fact, it may be said with truth that there was hardly any more fighting with the Coreish after this date, yet the prayer is evidently an after-thought. So far as the author of the Coran is concerned (and the Moslems refer the authorship to the Deity) it was at the time quite uncertain whether Medina might not again be besieged by the Coreish, in proof of which see Sura xxxiii. 20.
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