Birth of prophet.
PROPHET MUHAMMAD SAW THE LAST OF ALL MESSENGERSHIP AND PROPHETHOOD.I BEAR WITNESS THAT THERE NO GOD BUT ALLAH.
One day, while travelling north, one of the Arab tribes from Mecca met a
hermit in the desert. Some of the men stopped to speak with him. Hermits
were known to be wise and the Arabs often asked their advice. The
hermit asked where they had come from. When they replied that they
were from Mecca, he told them that Allah would soon send a prophet,
who would come from their people. They asked the name of this prophet
and the hermit answered that his name would be Muhammad and that he
would guide them to a new way of life.
Meanwhile in Mecca, Aminah, although saddened by the loss of her
husband, felt especially well and strong as she awaited the birth of her
baby. During this time she dreamt of many things. On one occasion it was
as if a great light were shining out of her, and on another she heard a
voice telling her that she would have a boy and that his name would be
Muhammad. She never forgot that voice but she told no one about it.
On Monday, the twelfth day of Rabi al-Awwal in the Year of the
Elephant, Aminah gave birth to a son. Allah sends man many signs when
one of His chosen Prophets is born and on that twelfth day of Rabi al-
Awwal in the year 570 A.D, many such signs were seen. Some were seen
by Jewish scholars who had read in their scriptures of a coming Prophet.
One of these learned men in Yathrib, for instance, saw a brilliant new star
he had never seen before as he studied the heavens that night. He called
the people around him and, pointing the star out to them, told them a
Prophet must have been born. That same night another Jew was passing
by the meeting place of the leaders of Quraysh in Mecca. He asked them
if a baby boy had just been born and told them that if it were true, this
would be the Prophet of the Arab nation.
Aminah sent news of the birth to her father-in-law, 'Abd al-Muttalib, who
was sitting near the Ka'bah at the time. He was very happy and began at
once to think of a name for the boy. An ordinary name would not do. Six
days came and went and still he had not decided. But on the seventh day,
as he lay asleep near the Ka‟bah, 'Abd al-Muttalib dreamt that he should
give the baby the unusual name of Muhammad, just as Aminah herself
had dreamt. And the child was called Muhammad (pbuh), which means
'the Praised One'. When 'Abd al-Muttalib told the leaders of Quraysh
what he had named his grandson, many of them asked, 'Why did you not
choose the sort of name that is used by our people?' At once he replied, 'I
want him to be praised by Allah in the heavens and praised by men on
earth.
6; The Childhood and Time With Halimah..
Like many other women in Mecca, Aminah decided to send her son away
from the city for his early years to the desert where it was more healthy.
Women from the desert used to come to Mecca to collect the new babies
and they would then keep them until they developed into strong children,
for which they were well paid by the parents.
Among the women who traveled to Mecca to fetch a new baby at the
time Aminah's son was born, was a Bedouin woman called Halimah.
With her was her husband and baby son. They had always been very poor
but this year things were harder than ever because there had been famine.
The donkey that earned Halimah on the journey was so weak from hunger
that he often stumbled. Halimah's own baby son cried all the time because
his mother could not feed him properly. Even their she-camel did not give
them one drop of milk. Halimah did not know what to do. She thought to
herself, 'How can I possibly feed another baby when I haven't got enough
milk even for my own son?'
At last they reached Mecca. All the other women of the tribe to which
Halimah belonged, the Bani Sa'd, found a child to take back with them,
but not Halimah. The only baby left was Muhammad (pbuh). Usually the
father paid the wet-nurse but Mohammed‟s father was dead. So no one
wanted to take him, even though he was from one of the noblest families
of Quraysh. Halimah did not want to take him either, but she did not want
to be the only woman to go back to her tribe without a baby to bring up.
She asked her husband whether she should take Muhammad (pbuh) or
not. He advised her to do so, adding, 'Perhaps Allah will bless us because
of him.' They started on the return journey and as soon as Halimah began
to feed Muhammad (pbuh) her milk suddenly increased and she had
enough for him as well as her baby son. When they were back home,
everything began to change.
The land became green, and the date trees, one of their main sources
of food, gave lots of fruit. Even the sheep and their old she-camel began
to give plenty of milk.
Halimah and her husband knew that this good fortune had come
because they had the new baby, Muhammad (pbuh), whom they had
come to love as if he were their own son.
When Muhammad (pbuh) was two years old, Halimah took him back
to his mother. She pleaded with Aminah, however, to let her keep him for
a little longer, and to her great joy the mother agreed. During his time
with Halimah's family in the desert, Muhammad (pbuh) played with her
children and together they would take the sheep out to graze. At other
times, however, Halimah would often find him sitting alone. It is said that
on one occasion, two angels came to Muhammad (pbuh) and washed his
heart with snow. In this way Allah made his heart pure for He intended
Muhammad (pbuh) to be greater than any man ever born and to become
the Seal of the Prophets. Halimah finally took Muhammad (pbuh) back to
Aminah, he
was a healthy, strong boy. Later he would look back with joy on the time
he had spent with Halimah, and he always thought of himself as one of
the Bani Sa'd.
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