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Sumayyah bint Khayyat

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Nationality
  
Ethiopian

Parent(s)
  
Khayyat (father)


Name
  
Sumayyah Khayyat

Spouse
  
Yasir ibn Amir

Sumayyah bint Khayyat httpsiytimgcomvigdwm25AtcGshqdefaultjpg

Known for
  
First Muslim martyr and female sahabah of the Islamic prophet Muhammad

Died
  
615 AD, Mecca, Saudi Arabia

Children
  
Ammar ibn Yasir, Abdullah ibn Yasir, Horayth ibn Yasir

Muslimah media the firsts sumayyah bint khayyat


Sumayyah bint Khayyat (Arabic: سمية بنت خياطّ‎‎) (c.550-c.615) was the first member of the Ummah (Arabic: أمّـة‎‎, Community) of Muhammad to become a shahidah (Arabic: شـهـيـدة‎‎, female martyr).

Contents

Sumayyah bint Khayyat SUMAYYAH BINT KHAYYAT RA GREAT WOMEN IN ISLAMIC HISTORY

Sumayyah bint khayyat african woman first martyr of islam


Early life

Sumayyah bint Khayyat THE BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY AFROETHIOPIAN

She was a slave in the possession of Abu Hudhayfa ibn al-Mughira, a member of the Makhzum clan in Mecca.

Sumayyah bint Khayyat Sumayyah bint Khayyat Wajibad

Her master gave her in marriage to Yasir ibn Amir, who was from the Malik clan of the Madhhij tribe in Yemen. After coming to Mecca to look for a lost brother, he had decided to settle there under Abu Hudhayfa's protection. Sumayyah gave birth to their son Ammar c.566. Yasir also had two other sons, Hurth and Abdullah, but there is no indication that Sumayyah was their mother.

Sumayyah bint Khayyat THE COMPANION Sumayyah bin Khayyat RA Female Companions of

At a later date, Abu Hudhayfa freed both Sumayyah and her son Ammar; but they remained his clients for the rest of his life. It is said that Abu Hudhayfa died "before Islam"; but it is also said that he was "one of those who mocked the Prophet".

Conversion to Islam

Sumayyah bint Khayyat THE BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY AFROETHIOPIAN

According to one tradition, Sumayyah was one of the first seven "to display Islam," the other six being Muhammad, Abu Bakr, Bilal, Khabbab, Suhayb and her son Ammar. "To display Islam" might refer to something other than conversion since, according to another tradition, Ammar was not converted until after the Muslims had entered the house of al-Arqam "after thirty men". Yasir and his son Abdullah were also converted "on the rise of Islam," but Hurth had been killed by the Dil clan before 610.

Sumayyah bint Khayyat Sumayyah bint Khabbab La prima donna martire dellislam YouTube

The Quraysh persecuted Muslims of low social rank. Sumayyah's family was vulnerable after the death of their patron, and it was other members of the Makhzum clan who tortured them to pressure them to abandon their faith. On one occasion she was put inside a pitcher full of water and lifted so that she could not escape. She, Yasir and Ammar were also forced to stand in the sun in the heat of the day dressed in mail-coats. Muhammad passed while they were standing like that and urged them, "Patience, O family of Yasir! Your meeting-place will be Paradise."

Although described as "a very old and frail woman," Sumayyah remained steadfast and refused to abandon Islam.

Death

One evening Abu Jahl, also a member of the Makhzum clan, came to watch her standing there and he began to insult her verbally. Then he killed her by stabbing and impaling her with his spear.

When Abu Jahl was killed at Badr, Muhammad said to Ammar, "Allah has killed your mother's killer."

Tabari mentions of an alternative account of Sumayyah's life. He says she married a Byzantine slave named Azraq after Yasir's death. She bore him a son named Salamah and their bloodline eventually married into the Umayyad family. Tabari also notes some stories as a case of possible confusion between two Meccan women named Sumayyah.

Historical Note

The earliest reference to the murder of Sumayyah is found in Ibn Ishaq's (died 761) biography of Muhammad, Siratu Rasulullah ("Biography of the Messenger of God"). Her name Sumayyah is not explicitly mentioned in Ibn Ishaq; it is a deduction from the reference to her son as Ammar "son of" Sumayya. However, she is named as Sumayyah in the accounts of Ibn Saad and Tabari.

References

Sumayyah bint Khayyat Wikipedia