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Abd Allah ibn Mas'ud

ʿAbd Allāh ibn Masʿūd (Arabic: عبد الله بن مسعود), c. 594 – c. 653, was a companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad whom Islamic tradition regards as the greatest interpreter of the Quran of his time and the second ever.[1][2] He was also known by the kuniya Abu Abd al-Rahman.[3]: 289 

ʿAbd Allah ibn Masood
عبد الله بن مسعود
Personal
Bornc. 594 AD
Diedc. 653 (aged 58–59)
Resting placeAl-Baqi', Medina
ReligionIslam
Notable work(s)Expert in Tafsir, with interests in the Qur'an, Sunnah, Hadith and Tafsir
Known forInterpretation of the Qur'an, Prominent transmitter of hadith
Other namesAbu Abd al-Rahman
ابو عبد الرحمن
RelationsBanu Hudhayl (tribe)
Muslim leader
Influenced by
Influenced
  • Future Theologians and Hadith Scholars

Early Years edit

Abd Allah ibn Mas'ud was born in Mecca in about 594[4]: 121  a son of Masud ibn Ghafil and Umm Abd bint Abdwadd, both of whom were from the Hudhayl tribe,[4]: 14  believed to be slaves,[5]: 16  or otherwise of low social status. However, Umm Abd's mother, Hind bint Al-Harith, was from the Zuhra clan of the Quraysh, and Masud made an alliance with her brother.[4]: 14 

Abd Allah had a brother, Utba,[6] and at least two wives in Muhammad's lifetime. One was Rayta bint Abd Allah, a craftswoman who supported Abd Allah and their child through her hand-crafts. The other was Zaynab bint Abd Allah from the Thaqif tribe[7]: 02  with whom he had several daughters. He specified in his will that none of his daughters should be married off without their own knowledge.[4]: 121  He also had a son named Abd al-Rahman.[3]

He is described as a thin, short man with very dark skin, and smooth hair reaching to his shoulders.[4]: 120  Abd Allah wore white clothes, and could be recognized in the dark by his distinctive, high-quality perfume.[4]: 119, 120  He was reported to be sociable and willing to speak out to put people at ease. In his character and goals, he was said to be the person "most like Muhammad".[4]: 1 

Conversion to Islam edit

Ibn Masʿūd was an early follower of Islam, having converted before 616.[4]: 115  He appears nineteenth on Ibn Ishaq's list of people who were converted by Abu Bakr.[6]: 116 

As a youth, he worked as a shepherd for Uqba ibn Abu Mu'ayt.[4]: 114  He first met Muhammad and Abu Bakr while watching his flocks when they were "fleeing from the idolators". They asked him for milk, but Abd Allah said he could not steal from his employer. According to Masʿūd, Muhammad then asked for an unmated ewe and stroked its udder, whereupon milk poured out. Abd Allah immediately asked to be taught "some of these words", and Muhammad began to teach him the Qur'an. Abd Allah later said that he learned 70 surahs from Muhammad.[4]: 114–115 

Later his mother[7]: 201  and brother[6]: 147  also converted to Islam.

Around 614 the Quraysh began a campaign to suppress Islam through the oppression of Muslims of lower social status.[6]: 143  Abd Allah, as a foreigner whose allies had withdrawn their protection, was vulnerable to this persecution. Abu Jahl—one of the high-status leaders among the Quraysh—once "clawed at him and punched him".[6]: 304 

The Muslims remarked one day that the Quraysh had never heard the Qur'an being recited clearly, and that someone needed to make them listen to it. Abd Allah volunteered. His friends reminded him that he had no protector and therefore the crowds might attack him, but Abd Allah replied, "Allah will protect me." He stood in front of the Kaaba and began to recite Surah Ar-Rahman from the Qur'an. When the Quraysh realised that he was reciting Muhammad's teaching, they began to hit his face, but he continued to recite. He returned to the Muslims with the bruises on his face, saying, "I have never despised Allah's enemies more than I do now, and if you like I will go and do the same thing tomorrow." The Muslims told him that he had already done enough, "for you have made them listen to what they don't want to hear".[6]: 141–142 

Abd Allah and his brother Utba were among those who emigrated to Abyssinia in 616.[4]: 115 [6]: 147  Abd Allah returned to Mecca in 619 with Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf.[6]: 168 

Emigration to Medina edit

When the Muslims emigrated to Medina in 622, Abd Allah lodged with Muadh ibn Jabal or Saad ibn Khaythama. One tradition states that Muhammad made a pact of brotherhood between Abd Allah and Muadh ibn Jabal; but according to another, Abd Allah's brother in Islam was al-Zubayar ibn Al-Awwam.[4]: 115  When land in Medina was allocated to the immigrants, the Zuhra clan was given an area behind the mosque, which included plots for Abd Allah and his brother Utba.[4]: 115–116 

Relationship with Muhammad edit

Outsiders perceived Abd Allah and his mother as members of Muhammad's household.[4]: 117 [8] He worked as a personal servant, taking care of Muhammad's bedding, toothbrush, sandals and travelling hygiene. "He used to screen him when he bathed and wake him when he slept and walk with him in a wild land." He was said to be the "keeper of secrets".[4]: 116  Muhammad once told him to climb a tree and bring him a twig. The companions laughed at how thin Abd Allah's legs were. Muhammad said: "Why are you laughing? Abd Allah's foot will be heavier than Mount Uhud in the scales on the Day of Resurrection."[4]: 118 

Muhammad recognized Abd Allah as one of the four foremost experts on the Qur'an.[9] He once asked him to recite; when Abd Allah protested, "Should I recite it to you when you are the one to whom it was sent down and revealed?" Muhammad replied, "I love to hear it from someone else." Abd Allah then recited it until Muhammad wept.[10]

Military career edit

Abd Allah fought at the Battle of Badr.[4]: 116 [6]: 338  After the battle, Muhammad ordered the warriors to search among the corpses for his enemy Abu Jahl, who could be recognised by a distinctive scar on his knee.

Abd Allah found Abu Jahl "at his last gasp" with his leg cut off. He seized his beard and asked, "Are you Abu Jahl?" Abu Jahl replied, "Can there be a man superior to the one you have killed or one whom his own folk has killed?"[11] Abd Allah then placed his foot on Abu Jahl's neck, and asked, "Allah's enemy, has Allah put you to shame?" Abu Jahl replied, "How has he shamed me? Am I anything more than a man whom you have killed? Tell me how the battle went." Abd Allah told him that the Muslims had won. Abu Jahl responded, "You have climbed high, you little shepherd!" Then Abd Allah struck off his head. He brought it to Muhammad, proclaiming, "This is the head of Allah's enemy Abu Jahl!".[6]: 304, 337–338 

Abd Allah also fought at the Battle of Uhud, the Battle of the Trench and "all the battles,"[4]: 116  including Tabuk. Twenty years later, he said he wished he had died at Tabuk.[6]: 608 

Caliphates of Abu Bakr and Umar edit

After the death of Muhammad, Abd Allah ibn Mas'ud became the eighth-most prominent transmitter of hadith with a total of 848 narrations.[12] Umar called him "a box full of knowledge".[13]: 444  The following traditions are among those attributed to him.

I asked Allah's Messenger which deed was the best. He replied: "Prayer at its appointed hour." I said: "Then what?" He replied: "Kindness to the parents." I said: "Then what?" He replied: "Jihad in the cause of Allah." And I would not have ceased asking more questions but out of regard.[14]

A man said: "Allah's Messenger, which offence is the most grievous in Allah's eye?" He replied: "That you associate a partner with Allah, who created you." He said: "What next?" He replied: "That you kill your child out of fear that he would join you in food." He said: "What next?" He replied: "That you commit adultery with your neighbour's wife." And the Almighty and Exalted Lord testified it: All those who call not unto another god along with Allah, and slay not any soul which Allah has forbidden, except in the cause of justice, nor commit fornication, and he who does this shall meet a requital of sin. [ Qur'an 25:68][15]

We were along with Allah's Messenger at Mina, that moon was split up into two. One of its parts was behind the mountain and the other one was on this side of the mountain. Allah's Messenger said to us: "Bear witness to this."[16]

Umar allotted Abd Allah a pension of 6,000 dirhams, and he was said to be very generous with his money.[4]: 119  His mother was also granted a pension of 1,000 dirhams.[7]: 202 

Around 642 Umar appointed him as a preacher, treasurer and magistrate (qāḍī) in Kufa,[17]: 5–6, 14, 16  saying: "I have preferred you with him over myself, so take him."[4]: 119 

Shia View edit

Conflict with the Government edit

Abd Allah, in his capacity as treasurer, lent a sum of money to Saad ibn Abi Waqqas, the Governor of Kufa, and when he was unable to repay it, they quarrelled. Their quarrel spread to their individual supporters until they became two "wrangling factions" in the city. Uthman became angry with both of them; in 646 he recalled Saad, extracted the money from him, and replaced him with al-Walid ibn Uqba. He thought of replacing Abd Allah too, but in the end he decided against it.[5]: 15–17, 45 

By 650, Abd Allah had quarrelled with al-Walid. A petition was brought to Abd Allah to investigate rumours that al-Walid was drinking alcohol; Abd Allah responded that it was not his business to spy on another man's privacy. Al-Walid felt that this statement was tantamount to a suspicion of his guilt. He accused Abd Allah of not defending his reputation, and they insulted one another verbally.[5]: 50–51  Al-Walid also tried to misappropriate state finances, but Abd Allah refused to comply with his demands. When Uthman instructed Abd Allah to obey al-Walid in everything, Abd Allah resigned his post. However, he remained in Kufa and continued to criticise the Governor.[18]: 109 

Another long-serving Muslim, Abu Dharr al-Ghifari, was also living in Kufa. He lived in the desert of Al-Rabadha.[3]: 69–70, f325  Sometime later, Abd Allah ibn Mas'ud went on a pilgrimage to Mecca. As he passed through al-Rabadha, his camels almost trod upon a funeral bier. A slave told him that it was the funeral of his master Abu Dharr al-Ghifari, who had died alone. Abd Allah burst into tears, exclaiming: "The apostle was right! You walked alone, you died alone and you will be raised alone!" Then he alighted from his camels and helped to bury his old friend.[6]: 606 

Uthman's Compilation of Qur'an edit

Uthman produced a standardised version of the Qur'an in 652. He sent a copy to each province, and ordered that all other Quranic materials "whether written in fragmentary manuscripts or whole copies," must be burned.[19]

It is said that Ibn Mas’ud was displeased by the finished product; in particular:

  • That he accused Uthman's scribes of adding three extra suras (1, 113 and 114) that had never been part of the original, and of making many other small changes to the text.[20]
  • That he preached a sermon in Kufa in which he called Uthman's standardised Quran a "deceit". "And whoever deceives like this will bring his deceit on the Day of Resurrection … I like it better to read according to the recitation of him whom I love than that of Zayd ibn Thabit … If I knew anyone to be more conversant with Allah's Book than I am, I would surely go to him if camels could carry me there."[13]: 444 

When Uthman's agents came to Kufa to burn all the variants, Abd Allah hid his copy from them.[13]: 444 [21] He justified his own version of the recitation by reminding people: "I recited before Allah's Messenger more than seventy suras of the Qur'an. His Companions know that I have a better understanding of Allah's Book than they do; and if I were to know that someone had a better understanding than I have, I would have gone to him." It was said that nobody could find fault with Abd Allah's version.[22]

When Uthman was called to account for his mismanagement as Caliph, one of the grievances against him was that he had destroyed variant readings of the Qur'an.[5]: 156  Much later, Abd Allah ibn Masud's variant readings were discussed on equal terms with the Uthmanic text by al-Farra (d. 207/822).[23]

However, the vast majority of Muslim scholars never accepted these reports due to their weakness, as well as many strong reports indicating the exact opposite to be true.

The Qur'an says in 15:87 "We have given thee seven of the oft-repeated (verses) and the great Qur'an." The seven often-repeated verses refer to al-Fatihah, the first sura of the Qur'an, which Abd Allah ibn Mas'ud is alleged to have denied. However, quoting Ibn Jarir al-Tabari, Ibn adh-Dhurays, Ibn al-Munzar and Ibn Mardwiyah, as-Suyuti narrated the following:

It is narrated from Abd Allah ibn Mas'ud, regarding the word of Allah, "We have given you the seven oft-repeated verses;" he said, "[It is] Fatihatu al-Kitab."[24]

In another narration, Abd Allah ibn Mas'ud was asked why he did not write al-Fatihah in his mushaf. He replied, "If I were to write it, I would write it before every sura." Abu Bakr al-Anbari explains this saying every raka’a (in prayers) starts with al-Fatiha and then another sura is recited. It is as if Ibn Masud said, "I have dropped it for the sake of brevity and I have trusted its preservation by Muslims (collectively)."[25]

There are also narrations from Abd Allah where he explicitly refers to suras 113 and 114 as surahs, for example: "Excessively recite two surahs. Allah will make you reach higher ranks in the Hereafter because of them. They are al-Mu'awwidhatayn (i.e. al-Falaq and an-Nas/nos. 113 & 114)…"[26]

Four qira'at of the Qur'an (Qira'at of Hamzah, 'Aasim, Khalaf, Al-Kisa'i) have chains of transmission (isnad) going through Abd Allah ibn Mas'ud, and they all include the above three suras. These are mutawatir chains and thus Islamic scholars give precedence to them, disregarding much weaker chains that go against it as inauthentic.[27]

For these reasons, Islamic scholars rejected the notion of Abd Allah ibn Mas'ud rejecting suras. Al-Nawawi says: "The Muslims have all agreed that al-Mu'awwidhatayn and al-Fatihah are part of the Qur'an and whoever denies this becomes a disbeliever and whatever is quoted from Ibn Masud in this regard is not true."[28] Ibn Hazm[29] also rejected the notion of Ibn Masud denying these suras, along with the vast majority of Islamic scholars.

Conflict with Uthman edit

Uthman recalled Abd Allah to Medina. He walked into the mosque, where Uthman was speaking, but the Caliph broke off his speech to insult Abd Allah. Aisha then interrupted with protests against this manner of speech "to a companion of Allah's Messenger". Uthman forbade Abd Allah ever to leave Medina again and ordered him out of the mosque. His servants removed Abd Allah so violently that they broke two of his ribs and, amid loud protests from Aisha, he had to be carried home.[18]: 110 

Uthman did not pay Abd Allah's pension for the rest of his life.[4]: 122 

Reading of the Qur'an in Kufa edit

Ibn Masʿūd read one of the most well documented "companion" readings of the Qur'an, which he taught in Kufa. The non-canonical Kufan reciter Sulaiman al-Aʽmash (d. 147 / 765), who continued the Ibn Masʿūd tradition in parts of his own reading, narrated that "I came to Kufa and the qirāʾa of Zayd was not amongst them, except as the reading ofʿAbd Allāh is amongst you today: no one recited it save one or two men".[30] Ramon Harvey asserts that Ibn Masʿūd's reading continued in use and was even taught as the dominant reading in Kufa for at least a century after his death and has shown that some of his distinctive readings continued to play a role in Hanafi fiqh.[31]

Ibn Masʿūd's reading played a greater or lesser role in each of the canonical Kufan readings. Professor Shady Nasser notes that the isnad of ʿĀṣim back to the Prophet passes through two main branches. One of these goes through Ibn Masʿūd via Zirr b. Hubaysh.[32]

The influence of Ibn Masʿūd is greater in the canonical readings of Hamza and his student Al-Kisa'i. Hamza learned his reading primarily from his fellow Kufans Ibn Abī Laylā, and Al-A'mash, insofar as the latter's was compatible with the Uthmanic rasm. Al-A'mash derived much of his reading from that of Ibn Masʿūd.[33]

From numerous sources Arthur Jeffery compiled the hundreds of differences in the reading of Ibn Mas'ud (as well as other companions) compared to the textus receptus, namely the Cairo edition, which is based on the reading of Hafs from 'Asim.[34] Many of these differences were reported by Al-A'mash and appear in Ibn Abi Dawud's Kitab al Masahif. Data is also available showing the extent to which Ibn Masʿūd's reading occurs in the Kufan canonical readings in terms of distinctive dotting of consonants.[35]

Codex Mashhad is an early Qur'an manuscript which has been identified as originally using the surah order reported by early sources from the codex of Ibn Masʿūd, though with a standard Uthmanic rasm text. Its surahs were subsequently re-ordered to the standard sequence, but enough evidence remained for the original to be reconstructed.[36]

Death edit

Abd Allah ibn Mas'ud died in Medina in 653[5]: 99  and was buried by the night at Al-Baqi'. It is disputed whether it was Ammar ibn Yasir or Caliph Uthman who led his funeral prayers.[4]: 121  He left a fortune of 90,000 dirhams. Al-Zubayr ibn al-Awam petitioned the Caliph to give Abd Allah's pension to his heirs "because they need it more than the treasury does." Uthman granted this request, although the exact value of the pension is disputed.[4]: 122 

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "'Abd Allah ibn al-'Abbas". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. I: A-Ak - Bayes (15th ed.). Chicago, Illinois: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. 2010. pp. 16. ISBN 978-1-59339-837-8.
  2. ^ Ludwig W. Adamec (2009), Historical Dictionary of Islam, p.134. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0810861615.
  3. ^ a b c Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari. Tarikh al-Rusul wa’l-Muluk. Translated by Landau-Tasseron, E. (1998). Volume 39: Biographies of the Prophet's Companions and Their Successors. Albany: State University of New York Press.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Muhammad ibn Saad. Kitab al-Tabaqat al-Kabir vol. 3. Translated by Bewley, A. (2013). The Companions of Badr. Loon:TaHa Publishers.
  5. ^ a b c d e Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari. Tarikh wa'l-Rusul wa'l-Muluk. Translated by Humphreys, R. S. (1990) Volume 15: The Crisis of the Early Caliphate. Albany: State University of New York Press.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Muhammad ibn Ishaq. Sirat Rasul Allah. Translated by Guillaume, A. (1955). The Life of Muhammad. Oxford: Oxford University
  7. ^ a b c Muhammad ibn Saad. Kitab al-Tabaqat al-Kabir vol. 8. Translated by Bewley, A. (1995). The Women of Madina. London: Ta-Ha Publishers.
  8. ^ Muslim 31:6017.
  9. ^ Sahih al-Bukhari 3806 | Book 63, Hadith 31[1].
  10. ^ Muslim 4:1752.
  11. ^ Bukhari 5:59:300, 3001.
  12. ^ Siddiqi, M. Z. (1961). Hadith Literature: Its Origin, Development, Special Features and Criticism, p. 26. Calcutta: Calcutta University Press.
  13. ^ a b c Muhammad ibn Saad. Kitab al-Tabaqat al-Kabir. Translated by Haq, S. M. (1972). Ibn Sa'd's Kitab al-Tabaqat al-Kabir Volume II Parts I & II. Delhi: Kitab Bhavan.
  14. ^ Muslim 1:151.
  15. ^ Muslim 1:164.
  16. ^ Muslim 39:6725.
  17. ^ Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari. Tarikh wa’l-Rusul wa’l-Muluk. Translated by Smith, G. R. (1994). Volume 14: The Conquest of Iran. Albany: State University of New York Press.
  18. ^ a b Abbott, N. (1942). Aishah the Beloved of Mohammed. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
  19. ^ Bukhari 6:61:510.
  20. ^ Gilchrist, J. (1989). Jam' al-Qur'an: The Codification of the Qur'an Text, pp 67ff. Mondeor, R.S.A.: M.E.R.C.S.A.
  21. ^ Tirmidhi 44:3104.
  22. ^ Muslim 31:6022.
  23. ^ Gilliot, C. (2006). "Creation of a fixed text.' In Dammen McAuliffe, J. (red.): The Cambridge Companion to the Qur'an, p. 47. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  24. ^ as-Suyuti. Dur al-Manthur. (Beirut: Dar al-Fikr). pp. Vol.5, 94.
  25. ^ al-Qurtubi. al-Jami' li-Ahkam al-Qur'an (also called Tafsir al-Qurtubi). Cairo: Dar al-Kutab al-Misriyah, 1964. pp. Vol.1 pg 115.
  26. ^ ibn Abd-al-Malik al-Hindi, Ali. Kanz al-Ummal: Hadith 2743. Beirut: ar-Resalah Publications, 1981.
  27. ^ al-Jazri, Shams ad-Din. an-Nashr fi Qira'at al-'Ashr. (Cairo: Maktaba at-Tijariah al-Kubra, n.d.). pp. Vol1, 1 55, 165, 172, 185.
  28. ^ al-Suyuti. al-Ittiqan. pp. Vol.1, 271.
  29. ^ Ibn Hazm. al-Muhalla. (Beirut: Dar al-Fikr, n.d.). pp. Vol.1, 32.
  30. ^ Ibn Mujāhid, Kitāb al-sabʿa, p. 67 cited in Harvey, Ramon (2017). "The Legal Epistemology of Qur'anic Variants: The Readings of Ibn Masʿūd in Kufan fiqh and the Ḥanafī madhhab" (PDF). Journal of Qur'anic Studies. 9 (1): 72–101. doi:10.3366/jqs.2017.0268. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  31. ^ Harvey, Ramon (2017). "The Legal Epistemology of Qur'anic Variants: The Readings of Ibn Masʿūd in Kufan fiqh and the Ḥanafī madhhab" (PDF). Journal of Qur'anic Studies. 9 (1): 72–101. doi:10.3366/jqs.2017.0268. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  32. ^ Nasser, Shady, H. (2020). The Second Canonization of the Qurʾān (324/936). Leiden: Brill. p. 113. ISBN 9789004401976.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  33. ^ Nasser, Shady, H. (2012). The Transmission of the Variant Readings of the Qurʾān: The Problem of Tawātur and the Emergence of Shawādhdh. Leiden: Brill. pp. 57–68. ISBN 9789004240810.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  34. ^ Jeffery, Arthur (1937). Materials for the History of the Text of the Qurʾān. The old Codices. Leiden: Brill. pp. 25–113.
  35. ^ Appendix 1 in Sidiche, Avnar (2021). "Increased Kufan consonantal dotting variants where Ibn Masʿūd lacked an ʿUthmānic reading of the Qurʾān: A statistically significant association and evidence on causality". www.academia.edu. Academia.edu. Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  36. ^ Karimi-Nia, Morteza (2019-11-01). "A New Document in the Early History of the Qurʾān: Codex Mashhad, an ʿUthmānic Text of the Qurʾān in Ibn Masʿūd's Arrangement of Sūras". Journal of Islamic Manuscripts. 10 (3): 292–326. doi:10.1163/1878464X-01003002. ISSN 1878-4631. S2CID 211656087.

Bibliography edit

allah, ʿabd, allāh, masʿūd, arabic, عبد, الله, بن, مسعود, companion, islamic, prophet, muhammad, whom, islamic, tradition, regards, greatest, interpreter, quran, time, second, ever, also, known, kuniya, rahman, ʿabd, allah, masoodعبد, الله, بن, مسعودpersonalbo. ʿAbd Allah ibn Masʿud Arabic عبد الله بن مسعود c 594 c 653 was a companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad whom Islamic tradition regards as the greatest interpreter of the Quran of his time and the second ever 1 2 He was also known by the kuniya Abu Abd al Rahman 3 289 ʿAbd Allah ibn Masoodعبد الله بن مسعودPersonalBornc 594 ADMecca Hejaz ArabiaDiedc 653 aged 58 59 Medina Rashidun Caliphate present day KSA Resting placeAl Baqi MedinaReligionIslamNotable work s Expert in Tafsir with interests in the Qur an Sunnah Hadith and TafsirKnown forInterpretation of the Qur an Prominent transmitter of hadithOther namesAbu Abd al Rahmanابو عبد الرحمنRelationsBanu Hudhayl tribe Muslim leaderInfluenced by MuhammadInfluenced Future Theologians and Hadith Scholars Contents 1 Early Years 2 Conversion to Islam 3 Emigration to Medina 3 1 Relationship with Muhammad 3 2 Military career 4 Caliphates of Abu Bakr and Umar 5 Shia View 5 1 Conflict with the Government 5 2 Uthman s Compilation of Qur an 5 3 Conflict with Uthman 6 Reading of the Qur an in Kufa 7 Death 8 See also 9 References 10 BibliographyEarly Years editAbd Allah ibn Mas ud was born in Mecca in about 594 4 121 a son of Masud ibn Ghafil and Umm Abd bint Abdwadd both of whom were from the Hudhayl tribe 4 14 believed to be slaves 5 16 or otherwise of low social status However Umm Abd s mother Hind bint Al Harith was from the Zuhra clan of the Quraysh and Masud made an alliance with her brother 4 14 Abd Allah had a brother Utba 6 and at least two wives in Muhammad s lifetime One was Rayta bint Abd Allah a craftswoman who supported Abd Allah and their child through her hand crafts The other was Zaynab bint Abd Allah from the Thaqif tribe 7 02 with whom he had several daughters He specified in his will that none of his daughters should be married off without their own knowledge 4 121 He also had a son named Abd al Rahman 3 He is described as a thin short man with very dark skin and smooth hair reaching to his shoulders 4 120 Abd Allah wore white clothes and could be recognized in the dark by his distinctive high quality perfume 4 119 120 He was reported to be sociable and willing to speak out to put people at ease In his character and goals he was said to be the person most like Muhammad 4 1 Conversion to Islam editIbn Masʿud was an early follower of Islam having converted before 616 4 115 He appears nineteenth on Ibn Ishaq s list of people who were converted by Abu Bakr 6 116 As a youth he worked as a shepherd for Uqba ibn Abu Mu ayt 4 114 He first met Muhammad and Abu Bakr while watching his flocks when they were fleeing from the idolators They asked him for milk but Abd Allah said he could not steal from his employer According to Masʿud Muhammad then asked for an unmated ewe and stroked its udder whereupon milk poured out Abd Allah immediately asked to be taught some of these words and Muhammad began to teach him the Qur an Abd Allah later said that he learned 70 surahs from Muhammad 4 114 115 Later his mother 7 201 and brother 6 147 also converted to Islam Around 614 the Quraysh began a campaign to suppress Islam through the oppression of Muslims of lower social status 6 143 Abd Allah as a foreigner whose allies had withdrawn their protection was vulnerable to this persecution Abu Jahl one of the high status leaders among the Quraysh once clawed at him and punched him 6 304 The Muslims remarked one day that the Quraysh had never heard the Qur an being recited clearly and that someone needed to make them listen to it Abd Allah volunteered His friends reminded him that he had no protector and therefore the crowds might attack him but Abd Allah replied Allah will protect me He stood in front of the Kaaba and began to recite Surah Ar Rahman from the Qur an When the Quraysh realised that he was reciting Muhammad s teaching they began to hit his face but he continued to recite He returned to the Muslims with the bruises on his face saying I have never despised Allah s enemies more than I do now and if you like I will go and do the same thing tomorrow The Muslims told him that he had already done enough for you have made them listen to what they don t want to hear 6 141 142 Abd Allah and his brother Utba were among those who emigrated to Abyssinia in 616 4 115 6 147 Abd Allah returned to Mecca in 619 with Abd al Rahman ibn Awf 6 168 Emigration to Medina editWhen the Muslims emigrated to Medina in 622 Abd Allah lodged with Muadh ibn Jabal or Saad ibn Khaythama One tradition states that Muhammad made a pact of brotherhood between Abd Allah and Muadh ibn Jabal but according to another Abd Allah s brother in Islam was al Zubayar ibn Al Awwam 4 115 When land in Medina was allocated to the immigrants the Zuhra clan was given an area behind the mosque which included plots for Abd Allah and his brother Utba 4 115 116 Relationship with Muhammad edit Outsiders perceived Abd Allah and his mother as members of Muhammad s household 4 117 8 He worked as a personal servant taking care of Muhammad s bedding toothbrush sandals and travelling hygiene He used to screen him when he bathed and wake him when he slept and walk with him in a wild land He was said to be the keeper of secrets 4 116 Muhammad once told him to climb a tree and bring him a twig The companions laughed at how thin Abd Allah s legs were Muhammad said Why are you laughing Abd Allah s foot will be heavier than Mount Uhud in the scales on the Day of Resurrection 4 118 Muhammad recognized Abd Allah as one of the four foremost experts on the Qur an 9 He once asked him to recite when Abd Allah protested Should I recite it to you when you are the one to whom it was sent down and revealed Muhammad replied I love to hear it from someone else Abd Allah then recited it until Muhammad wept 10 Military career edit Abd Allah fought at the Battle of Badr 4 116 6 338 After the battle Muhammad ordered the warriors to search among the corpses for his enemy Abu Jahl who could be recognised by a distinctive scar on his knee Abd Allah found Abu Jahl at his last gasp with his leg cut off He seized his beard and asked Are you Abu Jahl Abu Jahl replied Can there be a man superior to the one you have killed or one whom his own folk has killed 11 Abd Allah then placed his foot on Abu Jahl s neck and asked Allah s enemy has Allah put you to shame Abu Jahl replied How has he shamed me Am I anything more than a man whom you have killed Tell me how the battle went Abd Allah told him that the Muslims had won Abu Jahl responded You have climbed high you little shepherd Then Abd Allah struck off his head He brought it to Muhammad proclaiming This is the head of Allah s enemy Abu Jahl 6 304 337 338 Abd Allah also fought at the Battle of Uhud the Battle of the Trench and all the battles 4 116 including Tabuk Twenty years later he said he wished he had died at Tabuk 6 608 Caliphates of Abu Bakr and Umar editAfter the death of Muhammad Abd Allah ibn Mas ud became the eighth most prominent transmitter of hadith with a total of 848 narrations 12 Umar called him a box full of knowledge 13 444 The following traditions are among those attributed to him I asked Allah s Messenger which deed was the best He replied Prayer at its appointed hour I said Then what He replied Kindness to the parents I said Then what He replied Jihad in the cause of Allah And I would not have ceased asking more questions but out of regard 14 A man said Allah s Messenger which offence is the most grievous in Allah s eye He replied That you associate a partner with Allah who created you He said What next He replied That you kill your child out of fear that he would join you in food He said What next He replied That you commit adultery with your neighbour s wife And the Almighty and Exalted Lord testified it All those who call not unto another god along with Allah and slay not any soul which Allah has forbidden except in the cause of justice nor commit fornication and he who does this shall meet a requital of sin Qur an 25 68 15 We were along with Allah s Messenger at Mina that moon was split up into two One of its parts was behind the mountain and the other one was on this side of the mountain Allah s Messenger said to us Bear witness to this 16 Umar allotted Abd Allah a pension of 6 000 dirhams and he was said to be very generous with his money 4 119 His mother was also granted a pension of 1 000 dirhams 7 202 Around 642 Umar appointed him as a preacher treasurer and magistrate qaḍi in Kufa 17 5 6 14 16 saying I have preferred you with him over myself so take him 4 119 Shia View editConflict with the Government edit Abd Allah in his capacity as treasurer lent a sum of money to Saad ibn Abi Waqqas the Governor of Kufa and when he was unable to repay it they quarrelled Their quarrel spread to their individual supporters until they became two wrangling factions in the city Uthman became angry with both of them in 646 he recalled Saad extracted the money from him and replaced him with al Walid ibn Uqba He thought of replacing Abd Allah too but in the end he decided against it 5 15 17 45 By 650 Abd Allah had quarrelled with al Walid A petition was brought to Abd Allah to investigate rumours that al Walid was drinking alcohol Abd Allah responded that it was not his business to spy on another man s privacy Al Walid felt that this statement was tantamount to a suspicion of his guilt He accused Abd Allah of not defending his reputation and they insulted one another verbally 5 50 51 Al Walid also tried to misappropriate state finances but Abd Allah refused to comply with his demands When Uthman instructed Abd Allah to obey al Walid in everything Abd Allah resigned his post However he remained in Kufa and continued to criticise the Governor 18 109 Another long serving Muslim Abu Dharr al Ghifari was also living in Kufa He lived in the desert of Al Rabadha 3 69 70 f325 Sometime later Abd Allah ibn Mas ud went on a pilgrimage to Mecca As he passed through al Rabadha his camels almost trod upon a funeral bier A slave told him that it was the funeral of his master Abu Dharr al Ghifari who had died alone Abd Allah burst into tears exclaiming The apostle was right You walked alone you died alone and you will be raised alone Then he alighted from his camels and helped to bury his old friend 6 606 Uthman s Compilation of Qur an edit Further information History of the Quran and Quran desecration c650 656 Uthman burns Qurans Uthman produced a standardised version of the Qur an in 652 He sent a copy to each province and ordered that all other Quranic materials whether written in fragmentary manuscripts or whole copies must be burned 19 It is said that Ibn Mas ud was displeased by the finished product in particular That he accused Uthman s scribes of adding three extra suras 1 113 and 114 that had never been part of the original and of making many other small changes to the text 20 That he preached a sermon in Kufa in which he called Uthman s standardised Quran a deceit And whoever deceives like this will bring his deceit on the Day of Resurrection I like it better to read according to the recitation of him whom I love than that of Zayd ibn Thabit If I knew anyone to be more conversant with Allah s Book than I am I would surely go to him if camels could carry me there 13 444 When Uthman s agents came to Kufa to burn all the variants Abd Allah hid his copy from them 13 444 21 He justified his own version of the recitation by reminding people I recited before Allah s Messenger more than seventy suras of the Qur an His Companions know that I have a better understanding of Allah s Book than they do and if I were to know that someone had a better understanding than I have I would have gone to him It was said that nobody could find fault with Abd Allah s version 22 When Uthman was called to account for his mismanagement as Caliph one of the grievances against him was that he had destroyed variant readings of the Qur an 5 156 Much later Abd Allah ibn Masud s variant readings were discussed on equal terms with the Uthmanic text by al Farra d 207 822 23 However the vast majority of Muslim scholars never accepted these reports due to their weakness as well as many strong reports indicating the exact opposite to be true The Qur an says in 15 87 We have given thee seven of the oft repeated verses and the great Qur an The seven often repeated verses refer to al Fatihah the first sura of the Qur an which Abd Allah ibn Mas ud is alleged to have denied However quoting Ibn Jarir al Tabari Ibn adh Dhurays Ibn al Munzar and Ibn Mardwiyah as Suyuti narrated the following It is narrated from Abd Allah ibn Mas ud regarding the word of Allah We have given you the seven oft repeated verses he said It is Fatihatu al Kitab 24 In another narration Abd Allah ibn Mas ud was asked why he did not write al Fatihah in his mushaf He replied If I were to write it I would write it before every sura Abu Bakr al Anbari explains this saying every raka a in prayers starts with al Fatiha and then another sura is recited It is as if Ibn Masud said I have dropped it for the sake of brevity and I have trusted its preservation by Muslims collectively 25 There are also narrations from Abd Allah where he explicitly refers to suras 113 and 114 as surahs for example Excessively recite two surahs Allah will make you reach higher ranks in the Hereafter because of them They are al Mu awwidhatayn i e al Falaq and an Nas nos 113 amp 114 26 Four qira at of the Qur an Qira at of Hamzah Aasim Khalaf Al Kisa i have chains of transmission isnad going through Abd Allah ibn Mas ud and they all include the above three suras These are mutawatir chains and thus Islamic scholars give precedence to them disregarding much weaker chains that go against it as inauthentic 27 For these reasons Islamic scholars rejected the notion of Abd Allah ibn Mas ud rejecting suras Al Nawawi says The Muslims have all agreed that al Mu awwidhatayn and al Fatihah are part of the Qur an and whoever denies this becomes a disbeliever and whatever is quoted from Ibn Masud in this regard is not true 28 Ibn Hazm 29 also rejected the notion of Ibn Masud denying these suras along with the vast majority of Islamic scholars Conflict with Uthman edit Uthman recalled Abd Allah to Medina He walked into the mosque where Uthman was speaking but the Caliph broke off his speech to insult Abd Allah Aisha then interrupted with protests against this manner of speech to a companion of Allah s Messenger Uthman forbade Abd Allah ever to leave Medina again and ordered him out of the mosque His servants removed Abd Allah so violently that they broke two of his ribs and amid loud protests from Aisha he had to be carried home 18 110 Uthman did not pay Abd Allah s pension for the rest of his life 4 122 Reading of the Qur an in Kufa editIbn Masʿud read one of the most well documented companion readings of the Qur an which he taught in Kufa The non canonical Kufan reciter Sulaiman al Aʽmash d 147 765 who continued the Ibn Masʿud tradition in parts of his own reading narrated that I came to Kufa and the qiraʾa of Zayd was not amongst them except as the reading ofʿAbd Allah is amongst you today no one recited it save one or two men 30 Ramon Harvey asserts that Ibn Masʿud s reading continued in use and was even taught as the dominant reading in Kufa for at least a century after his death and has shown that some of his distinctive readings continued to play a role in Hanafi fiqh 31 Ibn Masʿud s reading played a greater or lesser role in each of the canonical Kufan readings Professor Shady Nasser notes that the isnad of ʿAṣim back to the Prophet passes through two main branches One of these goes through Ibn Masʿud via Zirr b Hubaysh 32 The influence of Ibn Masʿud is greater in the canonical readings of Hamza and his student Al Kisa i Hamza learned his reading primarily from his fellow Kufans Ibn Abi Layla and Al A mash insofar as the latter s was compatible with the Uthmanic rasm Al A mash derived much of his reading from that of Ibn Masʿud 33 From numerous sources Arthur Jeffery compiled the hundreds of differences in the reading of Ibn Mas ud as well as other companions compared to the textus receptus namely the Cairo edition which is based on the reading of Hafs from Asim 34 Many of these differences were reported by Al A mash and appear in Ibn Abi Dawud s Kitab al Masahif Data is also available showing the extent to which Ibn Masʿud s reading occurs in the Kufan canonical readings in terms of distinctive dotting of consonants 35 Codex Mashhad is an early Qur an manuscript which has been identified as originally using the surah order reported by early sources from the codex of Ibn Masʿud though with a standard Uthmanic rasm text Its surahs were subsequently re ordered to the standard sequence but enough evidence remained for the original to be reconstructed 36 Death editAbd Allah ibn Mas ud died in Medina in 653 5 99 and was buried by the night at Al Baqi It is disputed whether it was Ammar ibn Yasir or Caliph Uthman who led his funeral prayers 4 121 He left a fortune of 90 000 dirhams Al Zubayr ibn al Awam petitioned the Caliph to give Abd Allah s pension to his heirs because they need it more than the treasury does Uthman granted this request although the exact value of the pension is disputed 4 122 See also editSahaba List of Sahabah 7th century in Lebanon Ṣaḥaba who have visited LebanonReferences edit Abd Allah ibn al Abbas Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol I A Ak Bayes 15th ed Chicago Illinois Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2010 pp 16 ISBN 978 1 59339 837 8 Ludwig W Adamec 2009 Historical Dictionary of Islam p 134 Scarecrow Press ISBN 0810861615 a b c Muhammad ibn Jarir al Tabari Tarikh al Rusul wa l Muluk Translated by Landau Tasseron E 1998 Volume 39 Biographies of the Prophet s Companions and Their Successors Albany State University of New York Press a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Muhammad ibn Saad Kitab al Tabaqat al Kabir vol 3 Translated by Bewley A 2013 The Companions of Badr Loon TaHa Publishers a b c d e Muhammad ibn Jarir al Tabari Tarikh wa l Rusul wa l Muluk Translated by Humphreys R S 1990 Volume 15 The Crisis of the Early Caliphate Albany State University of New York Press a b c d e f g h i j k l Muhammad ibn Ishaq Sirat Rasul Allah Translated by Guillaume A 1955 The Life of Muhammad Oxford Oxford University a b c Muhammad ibn Saad Kitab al Tabaqat al Kabir vol 8 Translated by Bewley A 1995 The Women of Madina London Ta Ha Publishers Muslim 31 6017 Sahih al Bukhari 3806 Book 63 Hadith 31 1 Muslim 4 1752 Bukhari 5 59 300 3001 Siddiqi M Z 1961 Hadith Literature Its Origin Development Special Features and Criticism p 26 Calcutta Calcutta University Press a b c Muhammad ibn Saad Kitab al Tabaqat al Kabir Translated by Haq S M 1972 Ibn Sa d s Kitab al Tabaqat al Kabir Volume II Parts I amp II Delhi Kitab Bhavan Muslim 1 151 Muslim 1 164 Muslim 39 6725 Muhammad ibn Jarir al Tabari Tarikh wa l Rusul wa l Muluk Translated by Smith G R 1994 Volume 14 The Conquest of Iran Albany State University of New York Press a b Abbott N 1942 Aishah the Beloved of Mohammed Chicago The University of Chicago Press Bukhari 6 61 510 Gilchrist J 1989 Jam al Qur an The Codification of the Qur an Text pp 67ff Mondeor R S A M E R C S A Tirmidhi 44 3104 Muslim 31 6022 Gilliot C 2006 Creation of a fixed text In Dammen McAuliffe J red The Cambridge Companion to the Qur an p 47 Cambridge Cambridge University Press as Suyuti Dur al Manthur Beirut Dar al Fikr pp Vol 5 94 al Qurtubi al Jami li Ahkam al Qur an also called Tafsir al Qurtubi Cairo Dar al Kutab al Misriyah 1964 pp Vol 1 pg 115 ibn Abd al Malik al Hindi Ali Kanz al Ummal Hadith 2743 Beirut ar Resalah Publications 1981 al Jazri Shams ad Din an Nashr fi Qira at al Ashr Cairo Maktaba at Tijariah al Kubra n d pp Vol1 1 55 165 172 185 al Suyuti al Ittiqan pp Vol 1 271 Ibn Hazm al Muhalla Beirut Dar al Fikr n d pp Vol 1 32 Ibn Mujahid Kitab al sabʿa p 67 cited in Harvey Ramon 2017 The Legal Epistemology of Qur anic Variants The Readings of Ibn Masʿud in Kufan fiqh and the Ḥanafi madhhab PDF Journal of Qur anic Studies 9 1 72 101 doi 10 3366 jqs 2017 0268 Retrieved 24 April 2021 Harvey Ramon 2017 The Legal Epistemology of Qur anic Variants The Readings of Ibn Masʿud in Kufan fiqh and the Ḥanafi madhhab PDF Journal of Qur anic Studies 9 1 72 101 doi 10 3366 jqs 2017 0268 Retrieved 24 April 2021 Nasser Shady H 2020 The Second Canonization of the Qurʾan 324 936 Leiden Brill p 113 ISBN 9789004401976 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Nasser Shady H 2012 The Transmission of the Variant Readings of the Qurʾan The Problem of Tawatur and the Emergence of Shawadhdh Leiden Brill pp 57 68 ISBN 9789004240810 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Jeffery Arthur 1937 Materials for the History of the Text of the Qurʾan The old Codices Leiden Brill pp 25 113 Appendix 1 in Sidiche Avnar 2021 Increased Kufan consonantal dotting variants where Ibn Masʿud lacked an ʿUthmanic reading of the Qurʾan A statistically significant association and evidence on causality www academia edu Academia edu Retrieved 24 April 2021 Karimi Nia Morteza 2019 11 01 A New Document in the Early History of the Qurʾan Codex Mashhad an ʿUthmanic Text of the Qurʾan in Ibn Masʿud s Arrangement of Suras Journal of Islamic Manuscripts 10 3 292 326 doi 10 1163 1878464X 01003002 ISSN 1878 4631 S2CID 211656087 Bibliography editNoldeke Theodor Schwally Friedrich Bergstrasser Gotthelf Pretzl Otto 2013 The Genesis of the Authorized Redaction of the Koran under the Caliph ʿUthman In Behn Wolfgang H ed The History of the Qurʾan Texts and Studies on the Qurʾan Vol 8 Translated by Behn Wolfgang H Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers pp 251 275 doi 10 1163 9789004228795 017 ISBN 978 90 04 21234 3 ISSN 1567 2808 Retrieved 15 January 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abd Allah ibn Mas 27ud amp oldid 1191841684, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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