Bismillah Hir Rahmaan Nir raheem
Assalaamu alaykum wa rahmatuallahi wa barakatuhu
 
Abbad ibn Bishr


It was the fourth year after the Hijrah. The city of the Prophet was still 
under threat from within and without. From within, the influential Jewish 
tribe, the Banu anNadir, broke their agreement with the Prophet and made plans 
to kill him. For this, they were banished from the city. This was in the month 
of Safar.
 
Two months of uneasy quiet passed. Then the Prophet received news that tribes 
from distant Najd were planning an attack. To pre-empt them, the Prophet 
gathered a force of over four hundred men, and leaving one of his companions 
Uthman ibn Affan in charge of the city, set out eastwards. Among this force was 
the young Madinan, Abbad ibn Bishr.
 
Arriving at Najd, the Prophet found the habitations of the hostile tribes 
strangely deserted of men. Only women were about. The men had taken to the 
hills. Some of them regrouped and prepared to fight. The time of Salat al-Asr 
(the afternoon prayer) came. The Prophet feared that the hostile tribesmen 
would attack them during prayer. He arranged the Muslims in ranks and divided 
them into two groups and performed the prayer as the Salat al-Khawf (the Prayer 
of Fear). With one group he performed one rakah while the other group stood on 
guard. For the second rakah the groups changed places. Each group completed its 
prayer with one rakah after the Prophet had finished...
 
 
On beholding the disciplined ranks of the Muslims the hostile tribesmen became 
uneasy and afraid. The Prophet had made his presence felt and something of his 
mission was now known at first hand in the central highlands of Arabia whence 
he departed peacefully.
 
On the way back, the Prophet pitched camp in a valley for a night. As soon as 
the Muslims had settled their camel mounts, the Prophet peace be on him, asked: 
"Who will be our guard tonight?" "We, O Messenger of God," said Abbad ibn Bishr 
and Ammar ibn Yasir both of whom had been paired off as 'brothers' by the 
Prophet when he arrived in Madinah after the Hijrah.
 
 
Abbad and Ammar left for the mouth of the valley to take up duty. Abbad saw 
that his "brother" was tired and asked him: "What part of the night do you wish 
to sleep, the first or the second?" "I shall sleep during the first part," said 
Ammar who was soon fast asleep quite close to Abbad.
 
 
The night was clear, calm and peaceful. The stars, the trees, and the rocks all 
appeared to celebrate in silence the praises of their Lord. Abbad felt serene. 
There was no movement, no threatening sign. Why not spend the time in ibadah 
(worship) and reciting the Quran? How delightful it would be to combine the 
performance of Salat with the measured recitation of the Quran which he so much 
enjoyed.
 
 
In fact Abbad was enthralled by the Quran from the moment he first heard it 
being recited by the mellow and beautiful voice of Musab ibn Umayr. That was 
before the Hijrah when Abbad was just about fifteen years old. The Quran had 
found a special place in his heart and day and night thereafter he would be 
heard repeating the glorious words of God so much so that he became known among 
the Prophet's companions as the "friend of the Quran".
 
 
Late at night, the Prophet once stood up to perform the Tahajjud Prayer in 
Aishah's house which adjoined the masjid. He heard a voice reciting the Quran, 
pure and sweet and as fresh as when the angel Jibril revealed the words to him. 
He asked: "Aishah, is that the voice of Abbad ibn Bishr?" "Yes, O Messenger of 
God," replied Aishah. "O Lord, forgive him," prayed the Prophet out of love for 
him.
 
 
And so in the stillness of the night, at the mouth of the valley in Najd, Abbad 
stood up and faced the Qiblah. Raising his hand in surrender to God, he entered 
into the state of Prayer. Finishing the compulsory opening chapter of the 
Quran, he began reciting Surah al-Kahf in his sweet, captivating voice. Surah 
al-Kahf is a long Surah of one hundred and ten verses which deals in part with 
the virtues of faith, truth and patience and with the relativity of time.
 
 
While he was thus absorbed in reciting and reflecting upon the divine words, 
eternal words of illumination and wisdom, a stranger stalked the outskirts of 
the valley in search of Muhammad and his followers. He was one of those who had 
planned to attack the Prophet but who had fled into the mountains on the 
approach of the MusIims. His wife whom he had left in the village had been 
taken as a hostage by one of the Muslims. When he eventually found that his 
wife was gone, he swore by al-Lat and al-Uzzah that he would pursue Muhammad 
and his companions and that he would not return unless he had drawn blood.
 
 
>From a distance, the man saw the figure of Abbad silhouetted at the mouth of 
>the valley and he knew that the Prophet and his followers must be inside the 
>valley. Silently he drew his bow and let fly an arrow. Unerringly it embedded 
>itself in Abbad's flesh.
 
 
Calmly, Abbad pulled out the arrow from his body and went on with his 
recitation, still absorbed in his Salat. The attacker shot a second and a third 
arrow both of which also found their mark. Abbad pulled out one and then the 
other. He finished his recitation, made ruku and then sujud. Weak and in pain, 
he stretched out his right hand while still in prostration and shook his 
sleeping companion. Ammar awoke. Silently, Abbad continued the Salat to its end 
and then said: "Get up and stand guard in my place. I have been wounded."
Ammar jumped up and began to yell. Seeing them both the attacker fled into the 
darkness. Ammar turned to Abbad as he lay on the ground, blood flowing from his 
wounds.
 
 
"Ya Subhanallah (Glory be to God)! Why didn't you wake me when you were hit by 
the first arrow?" "I was in the midst of reciting verses of the Quran which 
filled my soul with awe and I did not want to cut short the recitation. The 
Prophet had commanded me to commit this surah to memory. Death would have been 
dearer to me than that the recitation of this surah should be interrupted."
 
 
Abbad's devotion to the Quran was a sign of his intense devotion to and love 
for God, His Prophet and His religion. The qualities he was known for were his 
constant immersion in ibadah, his heroic courage and his generosity in the path 
of God. At times of sacrifice and death, he would always be in the front line. 
When it was time for receiving his share of rewards, he would only be found 
after much effort and difficulty. He was always trustworthy in his dealings 
with the wealth of Muslims. Ali this was recognized. Aishah, the wife of the 
Prophet, once said: "There are three persons among the Ansar whom no one could 
excel in virtue: Sad ibn Muadh, Usayd ibn Khudayr and Abbad ibn Bishr."
 
Abbad died the death of a shahid (martyr) at the battle of Yamamah. Just before 
the battle he had a strong presentiment of death and martyrdom. He noticed that 
there was a lack of mutual confidence among the Muhajirin and Ansar. He was 
grieved and upset. He realized that there would be no success for the Muslims 
in these terrible battles unless the Muhajirin and Ansar were grouped in 
separate regiments so that it could be clearly seen who really bore their 
responsibility and who were truly steadfast in combat.
 
At the break of day when the battle commenced, Abbad ibn Bishr stood on a mound 
and shouted:
 
"O Ansar, distinguish yourselves among men. Destroy your scabbards. And do not 
forsake Islam."
 
Abbad harangued the Ansar until about four hundred men gathered around him at 
the head of whom were Thabit ibn Qays, al-Baraa ibn Malik and Abu Dujanah, the 
keeper of the Prophet's sword. With this force, Abbad unleashed an offensive 
into the enemy's ranks which blunted their thrust and drove them back to the 
"garden of death".
 
At the walls of this garden, Abbad ibn Bishr fell. So numerous were his wounds, 
he was hardly recognizable. He had lived, fought and died as a believer.
 
http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/history/biographies/sahaabah/bio.ABBAD_IBN_BISHR.html





Surah Isra 17 verse 80 Say: "O my Lord! let my entry be by the Gate of Truth 
and Honor and likewise my exit by the Gate of Truth and Honor; and grant me 
from Thy Presence an authority to aid (me)." 

Ameen,Thumameen.
Transliteration :Wa qur rabbi adkhilni mudkhala sidqiw wa akhrijni mukhraja 
sidqiw wa-j'al li mil ladunka sulta_nan nasira_(n).


Al-Tirmidhi HadithHadith 2482 Narrated by AbuHurayrah  (May Allah be pleased 
with him)
Allah's Messenger (peace be upon him) used to say, " O Allah, grant me benefit 
in what Thou hast taught me, teach me what will benefit me, and increase my 
knowledge. Praise be to Allah in all circumstances. I seek refuge in Allah from 
the state of those who go to Hell."
Tirmidhi and Ibn Majah transmitted it, Tirmidhi saying this is a tradition 
whose isnad is gharib.
 

Transliteration:an Abi Hurairah (radiya Allahu anhu) qaal:
qaala Rasul Allah (salla Allahu alayhi wa sallam): "Allahumma infa'ni bima 
'allamtani, wa allimni maa yanfa'oni wa zidni 'ilman, alhamdulillahi alaa kolli 
haal, wa a'odtho billahi min haali ahlil naar."


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