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Abd Allah ibn Jahsh

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Name
  
Abd-Allah Jahsh

Siblings
  
Zaynab bint Jahsh


Grandparents
  
Abdul-Muttalib

Uncles
  
Hamza ibn Abdul-Muttalib

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Died
  
625 AD, Al Madinah Region, Saudi Arabia

Parents
  
Jahsh ibn Riyab, Umama bint Abdulmuttalib

Cousins
  
Umamah bint Hamza, Bakr bin Hamza, Omara bin Hamza, Amer bin Hamza, Ya'la bin Hamza

Great-grandparents
  
Hashim ibn Abd Manaf, Salma bint Amr

Abd-Allah ibn Jahsh (Arabic: عبد الله بن جحش‎‎) (c. 586 – 625) was a cousin and companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad.

Contents

Family

He was the son of Jahsh ibn Riyab, an immigrant to Mecca from the Asad tribe, and Umama bint Abdulmuttalib, a member of the Hashim clan of the Quraysh tribe. One of his sisters was Zaynab bint Jahsh, a wife of Muhammad. The family had formed an alliance with Harb ibn Umayya and his son Abu Sufyan.

He is described as "neither tall nor short and had a lot of hair."

He married Fatima bint Abi Hubaysh, who was a cousin of Khadija from the Asad clan of the Quraysh, and they had one son, Muhammad.

Conversion to Islam

Abd-Allah ibn Jahsh converted to Islam under the influence of Abu Bakr. He joined other Muslims in the second emigration to Abyssina in 616. He returned to Mecca in late 619 and was one of the first to emigrate to Medina in 622.

Battles during Muhammad's era

Muhammad dispatched Abd-Allah ibn Jahsh on the Nakhla Raid in Rajab 2 A.H. (January 624), together with seven other Emigrants and six camels. Muhammad gave Abd-Allah a letter, with instructions not to read it until he had travelled for two days, but then to follow its instructions without putting pressure on his companions. After Abd-Allah had proceeded for two days, he duly opened the letter; it told him to proceed until he reached at Nakhla, between Mecca and Taif, lie in wait for the Quraysh and observe what they were doing. When the Quraysh caravan passed through Nakhlah, Abd-Allah urged his companions to attack the merchants despite the fact that it was still the sacred month of Rajab, when fighting was forbidden. In the battle, one of the Quraysh merchants was killed and two others were captured, along with all the merchandise. At first Muhammad rebuked Abd-Allah, saying, "I did not instruct you to fight in the sacred month." But later he announced a new revelation:

They ask you concerning fighting in the sacred months [i.e. 1st, 7th, 11th and 12th months of the Arabs' calendar]. Say, "Fighting therein is a great (transgression) but a greater (transgression) with Allâh is to prevent mankind from following the way of Allâh, to disbelieve in Him, to prevent access to Al-Masjid-Al-Harâm (at Makkah), and to drive out its inhabitants, and Al-Fitnah is worse than killing." [Quran 2:217]

Later Abd-Allah was among those who fought at the Battle of Badr.

Death

Abd-Allah ibn Jahsh was killed in the battle of Uhud by Akhnas ibn Shariq. According to his family, his opponents mutilated his corpse by cutting off his nose and ears.

References

Abd-Allah ibn Jahsh Wikipedia