History and Seerah
Abdul Nasir Jangda | Khutbah: Defending the Honor of the Prophet Muhammad (salallahu ‘alayhi wa sallam)
Published
Khutbah by Shaykh Abdul Nasir Jangda | Transcribed by Sameera
[The following is the video and transcript of Shaykh Abdul Nasir Jangda’s khutbah “Defending the Honor of the Prophet Muhammad (salallahu ‘alayhi wa sallam).” The transcript is slightly modified for the sake of readability and clarity.]
Download / listen to khutbah here.
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From the very early part of the prophethood of Muhammad [saws], there is a very amazing and remarkable story of love, commitment, dedication and devotion. In the very early part of the mission of the Prophet [saws] before the preaching was public, the people close to and around the Prophet [saws] started to embrace the faith and belief. The books of seerah mention the number of believers was now ranging from anywhere from 38-40 people. These are the first 40 believers and included many of his own close family members and close personal friends and close friends of those initial believers. It was a very close and small tightknit circle.
One of these first believers was al-Arqam b. Abi al-Arqam 
Abu Bakr 
Abu Bakr 


Abu Bakr 



To give you a little bit of insight into their relationship with one another, there are narrations about the life of the Prophet 





On top of that, he was a man of very great honor and dignity and respect. That is why when the Prophet 






I’ll tell you what Abu Bakr did when he heard the message through the words of the Prophet 





One time Abu Bakr 




This is a man of great love for the Prophet 
Spreading the Message of Islam
There is a beautiful story that when the number of Muslims reached about 40 and when the house of Arqam was popping at the seams and completely full of people, Abu Bakr told the Prophet of Allah 





These forty believers are a very small minority in a big city. They march into the Haram, and the narration says that to try to put themselves in a position of safety and security, they all scattered about in the Haram and looked for a few other members of their tribe or their family and went and stood next to them. Why? Because there was so much tribal loyalty and affiliation at that time that even if they disagreed with what you were doing or saying, if someone from another tribe tried to harm or hurt you, your tribespeople would say, “He is ours. We’ll take care of him. If he needs to be slapped around, we will do the slapping, and you don’t touch him. He is our family member.” There was enough tribal pride. It was a strategic move.
They scattered about and found some people of their tribe and family even if they weren’t believers to just be somewhat protected because these were very overwhelming odds.
The Prophet of Allah 





The narrations tell us that the people attacked and jumped Abu Bakr 


When he was taken home, it is said that when his mother and family members saw him, they started to uncontrollably cry. The narration says that he was unresponsive for a day. Allah knows best. It might have even been a coma. His family members gathered around him and kept trying to talk to him and resuscitate and revive him somehow until finally Abu Bakr 
Everyone gathered around, and the first words out of the mouth of Abu Bakr 





His father, Abu Quhafah, who was blind and the other family members were so disgusted that they started to curse him and they walked out. They said, “This man is helpless! It is pointless with him!” Before they left, they told his mother, who was called Umm’l-khayr, “Look after him, feed him.” They gave her advice on how to bring him back to good health.
When the mother came back inside and tried to treat him, he said, “What happened to the Prophet 
She goes to see Abu Bakr and imagine what his condition must have been. These were people who were used to war and used to sword fighting and brutality. When she saw Abu Bakr, she shrieked. Imagine what his face was like! She shrieked when she saw him and panicked. Finally, Abu Bakr says, “What happened to the Prophet 



When Abu Bakr 









In Light of Current Events
This is a story of true love and of compassion and of respect and of honor and of iman above everything else. I bring this story up and wanted to talk about this because of what has transpired over the last week or so. This is not something that is completely new to us, but nevertheless this is something that we have to understand. We must understand not just through emotional rhetoric and not through a PR statement and not through a photo-op but this is something we have to understand in the light of the Book of Allah and the life of the Prophet 
The Messenger of Allah 

I had heard about the video, but because I know myself, I can’t read that material and can’t watch it because I feel like I am physically incapable of doing so. It is too much to bear. One of my students insisted and started to play it and in twenty seconds, I had to get up and leave the room; I couldn’t take it. If we weren’t offended or insulted by it, then we have a problem in our own iman. There is no doubt about that fact. As you have probably heard and as it has probably been stated numerous times, but it is important that it is stated here from the minbar on the day of Jumu’ah so that we all understand and internalize this, we also have to understand how to react and how to respond and how to deal with these emotions.
I’m going to present three basic things to you.
Character and Behavior of the Prophet 
The first thing I would like to present to you is the character and behavior of the Prophet 

I will first talk about the outlook of the Prophet 

There is a narration that is in both Bukhari and Muslim where Abu Hurayrah 


I want you to sense the desperation in this example and analogy. This isn’t something that someone comes up with very casually. This is an expression of what somebody feels in his heart. This is pain and anguish. This is torture to live life in this way. That is why it is no surprise that the Prophet of Allah 
This is the outlook of the Messenger of Allah 

There is another narration mentioned by a few different books of hadith. It is narrated in the Mustadrak of Hakim and the Sahih of Ibn Hibban and by al-Tabarani in his collection of hadith. It is a very lengthy story. The Prophet 




He grabs the Prophet of Allah 


The Prophet of Allah 


That is what the Prophet 
Both sentiments are human reactions, but both sentiments need to turn back and look at the life of the Prophet 

That is the first thing I wanted to present. This is something consistent throughout the life of the Prophet 



Ignorance
The second thing is that there will always be ignorant people on the face of this earth. This is a reality of life. Stupid is as stupid does. There were ignorant people at the time of the Prophet 

This is the second thing we need to understand.
Telling People about the Prophet 
This will be my concluding point. How do we fix this issue and how do we solve this problem? There has to be a more tangible solution. We need to go out there and tell people about who the Prophet 


Before we take that step – and this is the part that might sting a little and will be a bitter pill to swallow, and I apologize for anyone I offend. I’m talking to myself – I cannot go and cannot speak to humanity about who the Prophet 




I need to ask myself and go look in the mirror, and it isn’t going to be fun. A self-assessment never is, but it is important. If the answer comes back as it does to me, “no, I don’t,” then it is about time I got a little serious about this. It is about time that I stop jumping and screaming when an incident occurred and actually dedicate my life to following the example and knowing who the Prophet 
It is very important! There are tons of resources. The excuses in our times are gone! We have scholars in your midst. Sit and learn from them. If you want a book, there are books. If you want to read online, it is online. A humble little effort that we started was taking into consideration the lowest common denominator: someone who is very busy and doesn’t have a lot of time or resources at all. I started conducting a weekly seerah class, and we record the audio and put it online for free. You can sign up so that it automatically downloads to your phone. You can listen to it while you drive. An hour a week – that’s it, but you know who the Prophet 
It is very important that we take this step to educate ourselves and our families and our communities until we become an educated community. Then, we most definitely have to make noise. But then we make the right type of noise. We don’t just go out there and yell and scream for the sake of yelling and screaming. Everywhere you turn, you see a Muslim talking about who the Prophet 



May Allah 

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Abdul Nasir Jangda is the founder and director of Qalam Institute. He is a hafiz and specialist in Sīrah & Hanafi Fiqh with a Bachelor's from Jamia Binoria, a Master’s in Arabic from Karachi University, and a Master’s in Islamic Studies from the University of Sindh.
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sabirah
September 17, 2012 at 4:55 AM
i watched the video to a large part, and it was just cringeworthy. I have seen worse anti – islam films. There are youtube videos that can do real harm but this particular movie is so badly made that it’s just beyond my dignity to take serious. My husband watched it and even he couldn’t believe that THIS is what the ummah has gone bonkers about. I’m at loss, really. I begin to doubt that this is the real reason for all these upheavals. Seriously, I began do doubt my whole existence as muslim and part of this ummah through this.
layla
September 17, 2012 at 10:46 PM
Yes, the state of the ummah worries me and I too am afraid it affects my life as a Muslim
Sidra Mahmood
September 17, 2012 at 1:16 PM
It made me cry, ya Shaykh. The more you know about the Prophet (may peace and blessings be on him), you are even more humbled. Thanks for sharing these words of wisdom with us. May Allah swt guide us to know more about our beloved and exemplify him through his character. Ameen.
Regular Baba
September 17, 2012 at 3:06 PM
Salam Shaykh, Jazak Allah for this. I was just listening to your tafsir of Surah Al Qalam, and the verses at the start of that fit perfectly into what you have written here. I have one concern. A small minority of muslims – not scholars, as far as I can tell – always bring up the story of
Ka’b ibn al-Ashraf when this kind of thing happens to justify the violence. As a scholar, how would you reply to such muslims?
Gibran
September 17, 2012 at 8:10 PM
Assalamualaikum wa rahmatullahi wa barakatuh
I like the post and everything, but when you are quoting things the Prophet salalalahu alayhiwasalam said, you should put it exactly, not say it in your own way.
Can someone show me the hadith/source for the following-
“Then the Prophet said to ‘Umar, “And give him his right back and then on top of that, from yourself, I want you to give him an extra gift because you threatened him and treated him badly. How dare you speak to somebody like that! I want you to make it up to him and do something nice for him. You don’t treat people that way!””
Hasnat
September 17, 2012 at 10:17 PM
JazakAllah for the excelleone Khutba….
Garry
September 17, 2012 at 11:09 PM
It’s a pity muslims have such thin skins. If christians were the same the whole Monty Python cast would have been murdered, heads cutoff, burnt and possibly even killed. Give it a rest and start to understand the world in a less serious way
Humbled Muslimah
September 17, 2012 at 11:56 PM
This is an eye opening article. Before we become angry and blame others for their ignorance, maybe we should look at ourselves and ask ourselves, ‘why are they ignorant?’. Maybe we would then realize that we are the ignorant ones.
Aly Balagamwala | DiscoMaulvi
September 18, 2012 at 12:52 AM
Jazak’Allah Khairin Sister. You are very right.
RCHOUDH
September 18, 2012 at 2:21 AM
I agree the incendiary reaction from Muslims, which has resulted in killing and destruction, towards this disgusting video is very unIslamic and generally due to our own ignorance of Islam. I propose we try to start a worldwide media campaign to get people (both Muslims and nonMuslims) to learn about the Prophet’s (SAWS) life. Since media (both new and old) is the quickest way to deliver information in the world today, we should try to utilize it to the best of our ability. Maybe we can collect funds from wealthy Muslims (like from the Gulf states) to get this started. Speaking of media, I wonder why most of Muslims don’t also boycott and call attention to the various ways Hollywood manages to smear Islam and Muslims through the propagation of negative stereotypes. Hollywood may not go about it as crudely and amateurishly as the dolts behind the movie causing the current uproar, but they still engage in propagating racist and Islamophobic propaganda too.
sufian
September 19, 2012 at 2:44 PM
much needed thing for the ummah.. today…
monotheist
September 20, 2012 at 8:38 AM
Saying this in all honesty and sincerity. As my kids have reached the age that Aisha (ra) was supposedly when she married the Prophet (saws), I have become increasingly uncomfortable with that aspect. I have to be honest as I look at my soon to be 9 year old, if a 50+ year old was at all interested in her in a sexual way, I would consider him a pedophile and a pervert–and I’m assuming most would feel that way. Even allowing for cultural differences or differences at the time, it doesn’t make it any better to be honest. It’s still wrong. I’ve tried to justify this in many many ways, and the best I can come up with is to assume that keeping track of age was perhaps not an exact science back then–and by relating these extremely young ages was a way to imply that she was definitively a virgin. Similarly, the use of 40 always meant a lot in ancient culture, so Khadija (ra) may just have been older, but not necessarily chronologically 40. (Which would explain her ability to get pregnant so many times during their marriage when fertility is usually questionable for 40+ women.) Perhaps there is a need for scholars and the Muslim community to address this aspect in the prophet’s life and at least speak out about the continued practice in many Muslim countries of child brides (especially those married to much much older men). We know that being married so young can be quite harmful to the girl, so shouldn’t it be haram?
Aly Balagamwala | DiscoMaulvi
September 21, 2012 at 10:58 AM
Dear monotheist
Please read http://muslimmatters.org/2010/10/13/understanding-the-problematic-age-of-aisha/ to read an article on this topic on this site. You may also see this video by Shaykh Yasir Qadhi http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=StISnUEVkaM
-Aly
anna
September 21, 2012 at 3:45 AM
jazak ALLAH sir for such a article… may ALLAH gives us the knowledge to understand our deen
Junaf
September 27, 2012 at 5:16 PM
The producers & director of this film , MUST have to be PUNISHED (by MUSLIMs) .
Gashu
October 13, 2012 at 3:21 PM
I’m a christian. And I’m so happy to see this article because I thought all muslims support the violent reaction against the rubish vidio. Specially I like the ‘ignorance’ part. People are making such vidios out of ignorance and people are reacting violently again out of ignorance. The best reaction should have been I think ignoring the ignorant. “I am not going to stoop to your level, sir!”
thank you.
Aly Balagamwala | DiscoMaulvi
October 14, 2012 at 6:41 AM
Thank you Gashu for your comment. We are glad we helped improve your view on Muslims.
Keep reading and commenting.
-Aly
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