Anas ibn Nadr

Anas ibn Naḍr (Arabic: ﺍﻧﺲ ﺑﻦ ﻧﻀﺮ) was one of the companions of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. He belonged to the Banu Khazraj tribe of the Ansar and was the uncle of Anas ibn Malik.[1] He could not join the Battle of Badr and was sad about it so he told the prophet,

"O Messenger of Allah! I was absent from the first battle you fought against the pagans. (By Allah) if Allah gives me a chance to fight the pagans, no doubt. Allah will see how (bravely) I will fight".

Sahih al-Bukhari, Kitab al-Jihad, 2805 and 2806
Anas ibn Nadr
Known forOne of the companions of the Islamic prophet Muhammad
RelativesAnas bin Malik (nephew)

He fought against the polytheists in the Battle of Uhud. In Sirat Ibn Hisham there is a narration from his time in this battle, where the polytheists said that the prophet Muhammad had died, and so he encountered companions who had stopped fighting, he told them then to stand and die for the sake that the prophet Muhammad had died, and was then martyred. His body was found with more than eighty wounds of swords and arrows. Only his sister could recognize his body by his fingers.[2][3][4] Anas ibn Malik thought the following verse of Quran was revealed concerning him and other men of his sort:

"Among the believers are men true to what they promised Allah. Among them is he who has fulfilled his vow [to the death], and among them is he who awaits [his chance]. And they did not alter [the terms of their commitment] by any alteration".[5]

Quran, Surat Al-'Aĥzāb, 33:23

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.