Why did The Prophet
Muhammad marry more than one woman?
Some critics of Islam, either because they are not aware of the facts
about the marriages of the Prophet Muhammad, upon him be peace, or because
they are not honest and objective about those facts, have reviled the
Prophet as a self-indulgent libertine. They have accused him of character
failings which are hardly compatible with being of average virtue, let alone
with being a Prophet and God�s last Messenger and the best model for all
mankind to follow. However, if the facts are simply recounted�and they are
easily available from scores of biographies and well-authenticated accounts
of his sayings and actions�it becomes clear that the Prophet lived the most
strictly disciplined life, that his marriages were a part of that
discipline, a part of the many, many burdens that he bore as God�s Last
Messenger.
The reasons behind the Prophet�s several marriages are various, but even
in the privateness of some of those reasons, they all had to do with his
role as the leader of the new Muslim ummah, guiding his people towards the
norms and values of Islam. In the following pages we shall try to explain
some of those reasons and, in so doing, demonstrate that the charges
levelled against the Prophet on this count are as vile and indecent as they
are utterly false.
The Prophet, not at that time called to his future mission, first married
at the age of twenty-five. Given the cultural environment in which he lived,
not to mention the climate and other considerations such as his youth, it is
remarkable that he should have enjoyed a reputation for perfect chastity as
well as integrity and trustworthiness generally. As soon as he was called to
the Prophethood he acquired enemies who did not hesitate to publicize false
calumnies against him � but not once did any of them (and in their
jahiliyyah (ignorance) they were not scrupulous men) dare to invent against
him what no one could have believed. It is important to realize that his
life was founded upon chastity and self-discipline from the outset, and so
remained.
At the age of twenty-five, then, and in the prime of life, Muhammad, upon
him be peace and blessings, married Khadijah, a woman much his senior in
years. This marriage was very high and exceptional in the eyes of the
Prophet and God. For twenty-three years, his life with Khadijah was a period
of uninterrupted contentment in perfect fidelity. In the eighth year of
Prophethood, however, Khadijah passed away and the Prophet was once again
single, as he had been until the age of twenty-five, though now with
children. His enemies cannot deny, but are forced to admit that, during all
these long years, they cannot find a single flaw in his moral character.
During the lifetime of Khadijah, the Prophet took no other wife, although
public opinion among his people would have allowed him to do so had he
wished to. After Khadijah�s death, he lived a single life for four or five
years. All his other marriages began after he reached the age of fifty-five,
an age by which very little real interest and desire for marriage remains.
The allegation that his marriages after this age were an expression of
licentiousness or self-indulgence, is as groundless as it is foul.
A question people often ask is: How can the plurality of his marriages be
in accord with his role as the Prophet? There are three points to be made in
answering this question, but first let us recognize that those who
continually raise such questions are either atheists (who themselves have no
religion) or are �people of the Book� i.e. Christians or Jews. Both these
classes of critics are equally ignorant of Islam and religion, or willfully
confuse right with wrong in order to deceive others and spread doubt and
mischief.
Those who neither believe in nor practise any religious way of life have
no right to reproach those who do. They have relations and unions with many
women without following any rule or law or ethic. However they may pretend
otherwise, what they do is unrestrained self-indulgence with, in practice,
little regard for the consequences of their life-style upon the happiness
and well-being of even their own children, let alone of the young in
general. In certain circles who advertise themselves as the most �free�,
sexual relations which most societies condemn as incestuous are regarded as
permissible; homosexuality is as �normal� for them as any other kind of
relationship; some even practise polyandry � that is, one woman having at
the same time many �husbands� � the agony of any children from such unions
who may never be sure of who their father is, we leave to the reader�s
imagination. The only motive that people who live in this way can have for
criticizing the Prophet�s marriages is the foolish hope that they can drag
Muslims down with them into the mess of moral confusion and viciousness in
which they themselves are trapped.
Jews and Christians who attack the Prophet for the plurality of his
marriages can only be motivated by their fear and jealous hatred of Islam.
They plainly forget that the great patriarchs of the Hebrew race, named as
Prophets in the Bible as well as the Qur�an, and revered by the followers of
all three faiths as exemplars of moral excellence, all practised polygamy �
and indeed on a far greater scale than the Prophet Muhammad, upon him be
peace.
Polygamy was not originated by the Muslims. Furthermore, in the case of
the Prophet of Islam, as we shall see, polygamy (or, more strictly, polygyny)
has, from the viewpoint of its function within the mission of Prophethood,
far more significance than people generally realize.
In a sense, the plurality of wives was a necessity for the Prophet
through whose practice (or Sunnah) the statutes and norms of Muslim law were
to be established. Religion may not be excluded from the private relations
between spouses, from matters that can only be known by one�s partner.
Therefore, there must be guidance from women who can give clear instruction
and advice without using an allusive language of hints and innuendoes which
leaves the meaning obscure and incomprehensible. The chaste and virtuous
women of the Prophet�s household were the teachers responsible for conveying
and communicating to the people the norms and rules that concern the conduct
of Muslims in their private lives.
Some of the marriages of the Prophet Muhammad, upon him be peace, were
contracted for specific reasons to do with his wives:
� Since there were young, middle-aged and old women amongst them, the
requirements and norms of Islamic law could be exemplified in relation to
their different life stages and experiences. These provisions of the law
were first learnt and applied within the Prophet�s household and then passed
on to other Muslims through the teaching of his wives.
� Since each of his wives was from a different clan or tribe, the Prophet
established bonds of kinship and affinity throughout the Ummah. This enabled
a profound attachment to him to spread amongst the diverse peoples of the
new Ummah, creating and securing equality and brotherhood amongst them in a
most practical way and on the basis of religion.
� Each of his wives, from their different tribes, both whilst the Prophet
was living and after he passed away, proved of great benefit and service to
the cause of Islam. They conveyed his message and interpreted it to their
clans; the outer and inward experience, the qualities, the manners and faith
of the man whose life, in all its details, public and intimate, was the
embodiment of the Qur�an � Islam in practice. In this way, all the members
of their clan, men and women, learnt about the Qur�an, Hadith, tafsir
(interpretation and commentary on the Qur�an), and fiqh (understanding of
the Islamic law), and so became fully aware of the essence and spirit of the
Islamic religion.
� Through his marriages, the Prophet Muhammad, upon him be peace,
established ties of kinship throughout the Arabian peninsula. What this
meant was that he was free to move and be accepted as a member in each
family, each of whose members regarded him as one of their own. For that
reason each felt that they could go to him in person to learn about the
affairs of this life and of the life hereafter, directly from him. Equally,
the tribes benefited collectively also from this proximity to the Prophet;
they esteemed themselves to be fortunate and took pride in that
relationship, such as the Umayyads through Umm Habiba, the Hashimites
through Zaynab bint Jahsh, and the Banu Makhzum through Umm Salama.
What we have said so far is general and could, in some respects, be true
of all the Prophets. However, now we will discuss the life sketches of
Ummahat al-Mu�minin � the mothers of the believers � not in the order of the
marriages but in a different perspective.
Khadija, may God be pleased with her, was the first among the Prophet�s
wives. At the time of her marriage, she was forty years old and Muhammad,
upon him be peace, was twenty-five. She was the mother of all his children
except a son, Ibrahim, who did not live long. As well as being a wife,
Khadija was also a friend to her husband, the sharer of his inclinations and
ideals to a remarkable degree. Their marriage was wonderfully blessed; they
lived together in profound harmony for twenty-three years. Through every
contumely and outrage heaped upon him by the idolaters, through every
persecution, Khadija was his dearest companion and helper. He loved her very
deeply and did not marry any other woman during her lifetime. This marriage
is the ideal of intimacy, friendship, mutual respect, support and
consolation, for all marriages. Though faithful and loyal to all his wives,
he never forgot Khadija after her death and mentioned her virtues and merits
extensively on many occasions. The Prophet did not marry for another four to
five years after Khadija�s death. Providing their daily food and provisions,
bearing their troubles and hardships, Muhammad, upon him be peace, looked
after his children and performed the duties of mother as well as father. To
allege of such a man that he was a sensualist or suffered from lust for
women, is as disgraceful and as stupid a lie as can be imagined. For if
there were even the least grain of truth in it, he could not have lived as
we know that he did.
�A�isha, may God be pleased with her, was his second wife, though not in
the order of marriages. She was the daughter of his closest friend and
devoted follower, Abu Bakr. Abu Bakr, one of the earliest converts to Islam
had long hoped to cement the deep attachment that existed between himself
and the Prophet, by giving to him his daughter in marriage. By marrying
�A�isha the Prophet accorded the highest honour and courtesy to a man who
had shared all the good and bad times with him throughout his mission.
�A�isha, who proved to be a remarkably intelligent and wise woman, had
both the nature and temperament to carry forward the work of Prophetic
mission. Her marriage was the schooling through which she was prepared as a
spiritual guide and teacher to the whole of the female world. She became one
of the major students and disciples of the Prophet and through him, like so
many of the Muslims of that blessed time, her skills and talents were
matured and perfected, so that she joined him in the abode of bliss both as
wife and as student. Her life and her services to Islam after her marriage
prove that such an exceptional person was worthy to be the wife of the
Prophet. For, when the time came, she proved herself one of the greatest
authorities on Hadith, an excellent commentator on the Qur�an and a most
distinguished and knowledgeable expert (faqih) in Islamic law. She truly
represented the inward and outward qualities and experiences (zahir and
batin) of the Prophet Muhammad, upon him be peace, through her unique
understanding.
Umm Salama, may God be pleased with her, was from the clan of Makhzum.
She was first married to her cousin. The couple had embraced Islam at the
very beginning and emigrated to Abyssinia, to avoid the persecutions of the
Quraysh. After returning from Abyssinia, the couple and their four children
migrated to Madina. Her husband participated in many battles and received
severe wounds at the battle of Uhud from which he later died. Abu Bakr and
�Umar proposed marriage to Umm Salama, aware of her needs and suffering as a
widow with children to support and no means of doing so. She refused
because, according to her judgement, no one could be better than her late
husband.
Some time after that, the Prophet himself offered to marry her. This was
quite right and natural. For this great woman, who had never shied from
sacrifice and suffering for her faith in Islam, was now alone after having
lived many years in the noblest clan of Arabia. She could not be neglected
and left to beg her way in life. Considering her piety, sincerity and all
that she had suffered, she certainly deserved to be helped. By taking her
into his household, the Prophet was doing what he had been doing since his
youth, namely befriending those who were lacking in friends, supporting
those who were unsupported, protecting those who were unprotected.
Umm Salama was intelligent and quick in comprehension just as �A�isha
was. She had all the capacities and gifts to become a spiritual guide and
teacher. When the gracious and compassionate Prophet took her under his
protection, a new student to whom all the female world would be grateful,
was accepted into the school of knowledge and guidance. Let us recall that,
at this time, the Prophet was approaching the age of sixty. For him to have
married a widow with many children, to have accepted the expenses and
responsibilities that entailed, cannot be understood otherwise than in
humble admiration for the infinite reserves of his humanity and compassion.
Umm Habiba, may God be pleased with her, was the daughter of Abu Sufyan
who, for a long time had been the most determined enemy of the Prophet�s
mission, and the most determined supporter of kufr (unbelief). Yet his
daughter was one of the earliest converts to Islam. She emigrated to
Abyssinia because of persecution by the unbelievers. Whilst there, her
husband died and she was all alone, and desperate, in exile.
The Companions of the Prophet were then few in number and had little in
the way of material wealth to support themselves, let alone to support
others. What then were the practical options open to Umm Habiba? She might
convert to Christianity in Abyssinia and so obtain support from the
Christians, but that was unthinkable. She might return to her father�s home,
now a headquarters of the war against Islam, but that too was unthinkable.
She might wander from household to household as a beggar, but again it was
an unthinkable option for one who belonged to one of the richest and noblest
Arab families to bring shame upon her family name by doing so.
God recompensed Umm Habiba for all that she lost or sacrificed in the way
of Islam. She had suffered a lonely exile in an insecure environment among
people of a race and religion different from her own; she was made wretched
too by her husband�s death. The Prophet, on learning of her plight,
responded by sending an offer of marriage through the king Negus. This was
an action both noble and generous, and a practical proof of the verse: We
have not sent you save as a mercy for all creatures (al-Anbiya�, 21.107).
Through this marriage, the powerful family of Abu Sufyan came to be
linked with the person and household of the Prophet, something that led them
to adopt a different attitude to Islam. It is also correct to trace the
influence of this marriage, beyond the family of Abu Sufyan, on all the
Umayyads, who ruled the Muslims for almost a hundred years. The clan whose
members had been the most fanatical in their hatred of Islam produced some
of Islam�s most renowned warriors, administrators and governors in the early
period. Without doubt it was the marriage to Umm Habiba that began this
change: the Prophet�s depth of generosity and magnanimity of soul surely
overwhelmed them.
Zaynab bint Jahsh, may God be pleased with her, was also a lady of noble
birth, descended and a close relative of the Prophet. She was, moreover, a
woman of great piety, who fasted much, kept long vigils, and gave generously
to the poor. When the Prophet asked for the hand of Zaynab for Zayd,
Zaynab�s family and Zaynab herself were at first unwilling. The family had
hoped to marry their daughter to the Prophet. Naturally, when they realized
that it was the Prophet�s wish that Zaynab should marry Zayd, they all
consented out of deference to their love for the Prophet and his authority.
In this way, the marriage took place.
Zayd had been taken captive as a child in the course of tribal wars and
sold as a slave. The noble Khadija whose slave he was, presented him to
Muhammad, upon him be peace, on the occasion of her marriage to the future
Prophet. The Prophet immediately gave Zayd his freedom and shortly
afterwards adopted him as his son. The reason for his insistence on Zayd�s
marriage to Zaynab was to establish and fortify equality between the
Muslims, to make this ideal a reality. His desire was to break down the
ancient Arab prejudice against a slave or even freedman marrying a
�free-born� woman. The Prophet was therefore starting this hard task with
his own relatives.
The marriage did not bring happiness to either Zaynab or Zayd. Zaynab,
the lady of noble birth, was a good Muslim of a most pious and exceptional
quality. Zayd, the freedman, was among the first to embrace Islam, and he
too was a good Muslim. Both loved and obeyed the Prophet, but their marriage
was unsustainable because of their mutual incompatibility. Zayd found it no
longer tolerable and on several occasions expressed the wish to divorce. The
Prophet, however, insisted that he should persevere with patience and that
he should not separate from Zaynab. Then, on an occasion while the Prophet
was in conversation, the Angel Gabriel came and a Divine Revelation was
given to him (Bukhari, Tawhid, 22). The Prophet�s marriage to Zaynab was
announced in the revealed verses as a bond already contracted: We have
married her to you (al-Ahzab, 33.37). This command was one of the severest
trials the Prophet had yet had to face. For he was commanded to do a thing
contrary to the traditions of his people, indeed it was a taboo. Yet it had
to be done for the sake of God, just as God commanded. �A�isha later said:
Had the Messenger of God been inclined to suppress anything of what was
revealed to him, he would surely have suppressed this verse (Bukhari and
Muslim).
Zaynab proved herself most worthy to be the Prophet�s wife; she was
always aware of the responsibilities as well as the courtesies proper to her
role, and fulfilled those responsibilities to universal admiration.
In the jahiliyyah, an adopted son was regarded as a natural son, and an
adopted son�s wife was therefore regarded as a natural son�s wife would be.
According to the Qur�anic verse, those who have been �wives of your sons
proceeding from your loins� fall within the prohibited degrees of marriage.
But this prohibition does not relate to adopted sons with whom there is no
real consanguinity. What now seems obvious was not so then. The pagan taboo
against marrying the former wives of adopted sons was deeply rooted. It was
to uproot this custom that the Prophet�s marriage to Zaynab was commanded by
the Revelation.
Juwayriya bint Harith, may God be pleased with her, was one of a large
number of captives taken by Muslims in a military expedition. She was the
daughter of Harith, chief of the defeated Banu Mustaliq clan. She was held
captive, like other members of her proud family, alongside the �common�
people of her clan. When Juwayriya was taken to the Prophet, upon him be
peace, she was in considerable distress, not least because her kinsmen had
lost everything and her emotions were a profound hate and enmity toward the
Muslims. The Prophet understood the wounded pride and dignity and the
suffering of this woman; more than that he understood also, in his sublime
wisdom, how to resolve the problem and heal that wounded pride. He agreed to
pay her ransom, set her free and offered to take her as his wife. How gladly
Juwayriya accepted this offer can easily be imagined.
About a hundred families, who had not yet been ransomed, were all set
free when the Ansar (the Helpers) and the Muhajirun (the Emigrants) came to
realize that the Bani Mustaliq were now among the Prophet�s kin by marriage.
A tribe so honoured could not be allowed to remain in slavery (Ibn Hanbal,
Musnad, 6,277). In this way the hearts of Juwayriyah and all her people were
won.
Safiyya, may God be pleased with her, was the daughter of Huyayy, one of
the chieftains of the Jewish tribe of Khaybar, who had persuaded the Bani
Qurayza to break their treaty with the Prophet. From her earliest years she
saw her family and relatives determined in opposition to the Prophet, upon
him be peace and blessings. She had lost her father, brother and husband at
the hands of Muslims, and herself became one of their captives. The
attitudes and actions of her family and relatives might have nurtured in her
a deep indignation against the Muslims and a desire for revenge. But three
days before the Prophet, upon him be peace, arrived at Khaybar, and Safiyya
fell captive in the battle, she had seen in a dream a brilliant moon coming
out from Madina, moving towards Khaybar, and falling into her lap. She later
said: �When I was captured I began to hope that my dream would come true.�
When she was brought before him as a captive, the Prophet generously set her
free and offered her the choice between remaining a Jew and returning to her
people or entering Islam and becoming his wife. �I chose God and his
Messenger�, she said. Shortly after that, they were married.
Elevated to the Prophet�s household she had the title of �mother of the
believers�. The Companions of the Prophet honoured and respected her as
�mother�; she witnessed at first hand the refinement and true courtesy of
the men and women whose hearts and minds were submitted to God. Her attitude
to her past experiences changed altogether, and she came to appreciate the
great honour of being the Prophet�s wife. As a result of this marriage, the
attitude of many Jews changed as they came to see and know the Prophet
closely.
Sawda bint Zam�a, may God be pleased with her, was the widow of one
Sakran. Sakran and Sawdah were among the first to embrace Islam and had been
forced to emigrate to Abyssinia to escape the persecution of the idolaters.
Sakran died in exile and left his wife utterly destitute. As the only means
of assisting the poor woman, the Prophet Muhammad, upon him be peace, though
himself distressed for the means of daily subsistence, married Sawda. This
marriage took place some time after the death of the noble Khadija.
Hafsa, may God be pleased with her, was the daughter of �Umar ibn al-Khattab,
the future second Caliph of Islam. This good lady had lost her husband who
emigrated to both Abyssinia and Madina and who died of wounds received in
battle in the path of God. She remained without a husband for a while. �Umar
also desired, like Abu Bakr, the honour and blessing of being close to the
Prophet in this world and in the Hereafter, so that the Prophet, upon him be
peace, took Hafsa as his wife so as to protect and help the daughter of his
faithful disciple.
Such were the circumstances and noble motives of the several marriages of
the Prophet Muhammad, upon him be peace. We see that these marriages were
intended to provide helpless or widowed women with dignified subsistence in
the absence of all other means; to console and honour enraged or estranged
tribes people, to bring those who had been enemies into some degree of
relationship and harmony; to gain for the cause of Islam certain uniquely
gifted individuals, in particular some exceptionally talented women; to
establish new norms of relationship between different people within the
unifying brotherhood of faith in God; and to honour with family bonds the
men who were to be the first leaders of the Muslim ummah after him. These
marriages had nothing at all to do with self-indulgence or personal desire
or lust or any other of the absurd and vile charges laid against the Prophet
by Islam�s embittered enemies. With the exception of �A�isha, all of the
Prophet�s wives were widows, and all his marriages (after that with the
noble Khadijah) were contracted when he was already an old man. Far from
being acts of self-indulgence then, these marriages were acts of
self-discipline.
The number of the wives the Prophet had was a special dispensation within
the law of Islam and unique to his person. However, when the Revelation
restricting polygamy came, the Prophet�s marriages had already been
contracted. Thereafter, the Prophet was also prohibited to marry again. |