Description: A look at the physical and moral characteristics of the
Prophet of God, Muhammad, may God praise him.
“I began to look at him and at the moon, he was wearing a red mantle,
and he appeared to be more beautiful than the moon to me.” (Al-Tirmidhi)
This is how Jabir ibn Samura described the Last of the Prophets, the
Chief of the Pious, the Prince of the Believers, the Chosen One of the Most
Merciful – Muhammad, the Messenger of God.
He had a pleasant face that was round, white, and fair. His hair fell to his ear lobes. His beard
was thick and black. When he was pleased, his face would light up. His laugh
was no more than smiling. His eyes
were blackish, and his eyelashes were long. His long eyebrows were curved. When
the eyes of Abdullah ibn Salam, the chief rabbi of Medina, fell on his face,
he declared that such a noble face could not be the face of a liar!
He was of medium height, neither tall nor short. He walked inclining
forward. He wore tanned leather sandals. His pants would reach to the middle
of his shin or sometimes just above his ankles.
On his back, towards the left shoulder was the ‘Seal of Prophethood’.
It was the size of a pigeon’s egg with spots like moles on it. His palms were
described to be softer than the brocade of silk.
He was recognized by his fragrance when he approached from a
distance. Drops of his perspiration
were described to be like pearls. His companions collected his sweat to mix
with their perfumes which made them even more fragrant!
Islamic doctrine holds if someone has been blessed with the vision of
the Prophet in a dream as described, then indeed they have seen him.
He would keep silent for long periods of time and was the most
dignified when silent.
When he spoke, he uttered nothing but the truth in a voice pleasing to
the ears. He did not speak rapidly as
many people do today; rather he spoke in a clear speech so that those who sat
with him could remember it. His speech was described to be such that anyone
who wished to count his words could have done so easily. His companions
described him to be neither vulgar nor indecent. He neither cursed people,
nor abused them. He merely reprimanded by saying:
“What is the matter with such and such people” (Saheeh Al-Bukhari)
The most hateful conduct to him was lying. Sometimes he used to repeat
himself twice or even thrice to enable the listeners to understand him well. He would give short sermons. While
delivering the sermons his eyes would become red, his voice would rise, and
his emotions become visible as if he were warning of an imminent assault from
an enemy.
He led a simple life without any extravagance or lavishness. He put the
worldly life behind his back and turned away from it. He considered it to be a prison, not
Paradise! Had he wished, he could have had anything he desired, for the keys
of its treasures were presented to him, but he refused to accept them. He did not exchange his share of the life
to come with the worldly life. He knew
that it is a corridor, not a permanent residence. He understood fully well
that it is a transit station, not a leisure park. He took it for its real
worth - a summer cloud that would soon disperse.
Yet God says He enriched him from poverty:
“Did He not find you poor and enrich you?” (Quran 93:8)
Aisha, his wife, said:
“A month would pass while the family of Muhammad would not light fire
in their homes. They subsisted on two things - dates and water. Some
residents of Medina who were his neighbors would send milk from their sheep,
which he would drink and then give to his family.” (Saheeh Al-Bukhari, Saheeh
Muslim)
She said the family of Muhammad never ate wheat bread to their
satisfaction for three consecutive days from the time of his arrival at
Medina until he passed away, about 10 years!
With all this, he would stand up in the middle of the night to offer
his gratitude to his Lord in prayer. He would pray for so long that his feet
would swell! When his wives would ask
why he worshipped God so much, his only response would be:
“Shall I not be a thankful servant of God?” (Saheeh Al-Bukhari, Saheeh
Muslim)
Omar, one of his companions, remembering the days he passed in hunger
said that sometimes the Prophet did not even have rotten dates to satisfy his
hunger!
Abdullah ibn Mas’ud, another companion and eye-witness, says that once
,when Muhammad, may God praise him, awoke from sleep, the marks of the mat
made out of date palm leaves on which he used to sleep were etched on his
body. Abdullah complained:
“My father and mother be ransomed for you! Why did you not let us
prepare something (softer) for you from which you could protect yourself?”
He replied:
“I have nothing to do with this world. I am in this world like a rider
who stops under the shade of the tree for a short time and, after taking
rest, he resumes his journey again, leaving the tree behind.” (Al-Tirmidhi)
Various conquerors in the annals of history are known for spilling
rivers of blood and erecting pyramids of skulls. Muhammad, may God praise
him, is known for his forgiveness. He
never took revenge from anyone who wronged him to the point that he never
struck anybody with his hand, neither a woman nor a servant, unless he was
fighting in battle. His forgiveness could be seen on the day he entered Mecca
as a conqueror after eight years of exile.
He forgave those who persecuted him, and forced him and his family in
exile for three years in rugged mountains, who had accused him of being a
lunatic, a poet, or one possessed. He
pardoned Abu Sufyan, one of the most evil of people who plotted to persecute
him day and night, along with his wife, Hind, who mutilated the dead body of
the Prophet’s Muslim uncle and ate the raw liver after ordering Wahshi, a
fierce slave known for his fighting skills,
to kill Him, which later led them to accept Islam. Who else could be
on such an exalted standard of character but the noblest and most truthful
Messenger of God?
Wahshi, who used to live in Mecca, won his freedom from Hind for the
service of killing the uncle of the Prophet. When Islam gained dominance in
Mecca, Wahshi ran away from Mecca to Taif. Eventually Taif also succumbed to
the Muslims. He was told Muhammad would
forgive anyone who accepted Islam. Even though the crime was so great, Wahshi
gathered his courage and came to the Prophet of Mercy and announced his
Islam, and Muhammad, may God praise him, forgave him.
His forgiveness even extended to Habbar ibn Aswad. When Zaynab, the
Prophet’s daughter, was migrating from Mecca to Medina, the Meccans tried to
stop her, Habbar was one of them. He
made the Prophet’s pregnant daughter fall from her camel. As a result, she
lost her baby. Running away from the guilt of his crime, Habbar fled to Iran,
but God turned his heart towards the Prophet. So he came to the Prophet’s
court, acknowledged his guilt, bore the testimony of faith, and was forgiven
by the Prophet!
Muhammad, may God praise him, performed physical miracles with God’s
permission. He split the moon into two halves by merely pointing his finger
at it. In a mystical journey known as
Mi’raaj, he traveled in one night from Mecca to Jerusalem on a heavenly
mount, al-Buraq, led all the Prophets in prayer, and then ascended beyond the
seven heavens to meet his Lord. He cured the sick and the blind; demons would
leave the possessed by his command, water flowed from his fingers, and his
food would glorify God.
Yet he was the most humble of men.
He sat on the ground, ate on the ground, and slept on the ground. A
companion narrated that if a stranger were to enter a gathering where he was
present, he would not be able to differentiate the Prophet from his companions
due to his humbleness. Anas, his servant, swore that in his nine years of
service, the noble Prophet never chastised him or blamed him for anything. Those
around him described Muhammad to be so humble that even a little girl could
hold his hand and take him wherever she wished. He used to come to the weak among the
Muslims in order to visit the sick and attend their funeral processions. He
used to stay at the back of the caravan to aid the weak and pray for them. He
would not hesitate to walk with a widow or a poor person until he had
accomplished for them what they needed. He responded to the invitation of
even slaves, eating nothing more than barley bread with them.
He was the best of men to his wives. Aisha, his wife, described how
humble he was:
“He used to remain busy serving and helping his household, and when the
time for prayer came he would perform ablution and go for prayer. He would
patch his own sandals and sew his own garments. He was an ordinary human being, searching
his clothes for lice, milking his sheep, and doing his own chores.” (Saheeh
Al-Bukhari)
Indeed he was the best of all people to his family. His personality was
such that people were not driven away from him!
Such was the noble Prophet of God who we must love more than our own
selves and whom God has described as:
“Indeed in the Messenger of God you have a good example to follow…”
(Quran 33:21)
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