
| Aishah:
A Paragon of Islamic Activism By
Shaikh Ahmad Kutty Aishah, the mother of the faithful,
exemplifies the character of a Muslim nurtured from an early age in a pristine
Islamic environment. Having been educated by the best of all teachers, the messenger
of Allah, she serves as a role model for the perfection that Muslims can aspire
for and attain. It is actually a multifaceted role that the life of Aishah
provides us with. They range from the private to the public and from the domestic
to the scholarly. Among these roles was the ever important one of being a mother
of the faithful and as such, she manifested the best of Islamic ideals as outlined
in the Quran. Generosity, selflessness, honesty and the pursuit of justice
and truth were among the ideals more prominent in Aishahs character.
As a student, she rose from an intelligent youth, with a critical and probing
mind to a highly effective and successful teacher, scholar and jurist, who held
firm and bold views in all of the vital areas of Islamic knowledge such as tafsir,
hadith, fiqh, Islamic history, nuances of Arabic language, etc. One of her hallmarks
was being courageous and forthright in expressing these views. Aishahs
assertiveness, confidence and outspokenness for standing up for what she believed
to be true and right explodes the stereotype prevailing even among Muslims today
of the rightful role for Muslim women that of being a silent
witness prevented by her femininity from participating in the real live of the
community. Her unparalleled insight into the daily life of the messenger
of Allah as well as the independence of her thought and character brought her
life into sharp focus from other personalities of the time. Aishahs
Background While Aishahs full name was Aishah
bint Abi Bakr al-siddiq, she was more commonly known as Aishah bint
al-Ssiddiq as well as al-Ssiddiqhah bint al-Ssiddiq (the truthful daughter of
the truthful). The Prophet, peace be upon him, nicknamed her Umm Abd Allah because
of her special care for her nephew Abd Alalh b. al-Zubayr. She grew up in
a pure Islamic environment as both her parents had embraced Islam early in the
Prophets mission. As she states, since my age of discernment, I was
conditioned on seeing my parents practising only Islam. The experiences
of the early years of Islam left vivid impressions on her extremely sensitive
consciousness and helped shape her character and personality. From a very young
age she acquired a firm faith in Islam and a keen spirit of sacrifice for truth,
as well as a deep revulsion for infidelity and pagan ways. As a Mother
of the Faithful Aishah was the only virgin that the Prophet,
peace be upon him, ever married. Her marriage to him was inspired by Allah, and
took place at a very early age - not out of the ordinary according to the customs
of the Arabs, Hebrews and other nations of that time. While there is a tendency
to dwell on this fact, it would be amiss to judge the Prophets marriage
to Aishah by our current cultural standards. The Prophets marriages
cannot be detached from his mission; they had the dual function of uniting the
Arabs into a single nation, as well as transmitting legacy of his knowledge and
wisdom to the posterity as stated in the Quran. Aishah by both
her nature and her nurture was the most qualified to fulfill this role of being
an authentic transmitter of the Prophets legacya fact confirmed by
the statements of scholars, past and the present. And she did this by living her
formative years at the Prophets side. Aishahs deep
love for the Prophet, peace be upon him, caused her to be jealous of his other
wives as her heart was singularly attached to him. The Prophet also reciprocated
this love by showing towards her such intense feelings of love that it became
legendary among the companions. Anas remarked that the first expression
of love in Islam was the love of the Prophet towards his wife Aishah!
The Prophets love for her was not purely based on his physical attractions
to her which we have no reason to doubt, but even more so it was due to the role
destined to her as an unbroken link in the chain of transmission of the Prophetic
legacy. The unique signs of this role were expressed in the fact that while he
received revelations from Allah while he was with Aishah, this was
not the case while he was with any of his other wives and, no other wives of the
Prophet, peace be upon him, saw the Angel Jibreel as Aishah did. This
was stated by the Prophet peace be upon him, as a sign of the divine honour bestowed
on Aishah. Aishah was singularly known to have been
a conduit of divine mercy as her trials and tribulations and her attitude of self-surrender
merited the revelation of several verses. These verses are enshrined in the Quran
to serve as inspiration for all generations to come. The sahabah often recognized
the divine grace manifested through her as some of them testified explaining the
verse concerning tayammum which had been revealed in connection with an ordeal
faced by Aishah. It is significant that Allah extols her purity,
modesty and piety for all to recite (see the verses in surat al-Noor especially:
24: 23; 26). Aishah typified the best ideals expressed in the
following verse: Muslim men and women, believing men and women, obedient
men and women, truthful men and women, patient men and women, humble men and women,
charity-giving men and women, and those men and women who remember Allah abundantly,
for them Allah has prepared forgiveness and an immense reward. (Quran:
33: 35). Her Piety and Asceticism While she was born into a
highly respectable family with wealth, fame and status (as Abu Bakr was a man
of abundant means) and in spite of being brought up with comfortable living conditions,
Aishah bore patiently the hardships, simplicity and ascetic life-style
of the Prophet, peace be upon him. Allah had given the Prophets wives the
choice to bear patiently the harsh life-style they were accustomed to with the
Prophet, peace be upon him, in preference for Allah and His Messenger and the
Hereafter, or choose a life of this world and part their ways honourably with
sufficient alimony. Each wife selected the former. With her choice to live
a life of utter simplicity and asceticism, Aishah ate little and drank
little, and preferred to wear tattered clothes her whole life, giving away in
charity virtually everything that came to her in terms of money and wealth. The
charitable nature of Aishah exemplified the Prophets dictum,
spending in such a way that the left hand does not know what right hand
had given. Her legendary generosity and trait of selfless giving
forgetting her own urgent needs also brought to life the Quranic
ideal, they prefer others over their own selves even though they themselves
are faced with dire need. Urwah, who was one of the great scholars taught
by Aishah, said of her, I saw Aishah giving away
seventy thousand dirhams in charity while she was wearing a garment which had
so many patches sewn into it! It was due to her loyalty to Allah
and her devotion to the Prophet and his cause that Aishah gave up
the comforts of the lifestyle of her own household and chose the simple life-style
of the Prophet, peace be upon him bearing all the harshness of it in spite
of her young age. After the death of the Prophet, peace be upon him, Aishah
continued to live an ascetic existence dedicated to fasting, prayers, charities,
and to the care of orphans and the destitute. Her Intellect and Scholarship
Aishah was endowed with an extraordinary intelligence that very
few had been endowed with. She was not merely a passive student in understanding
and learning religion even from the best and noblest of teachers, the Prophet,
peace be upon him. Her trademark was her critical, ever-inquisitive and probing
mind. There are numerous examples of her further questioning the Prophets
answers. Once when he found out she had followed him in disguise on his trip to
the graveyard to pray for the departed companions in the middle of night, the
Prophet asked her, Why did you do this? Did your Devil visit you?
Aishah asked back, Does every person have a devil following
him or her around? When he replied to the affirmative, she asked, Are
you included in this? He answered, Yes. I am included in this; but
my Lord has helped me against him. Thanks to this he has become a Muslim (i..e
he has surrendered and thus does not command anything but good!) Another
example of her questioning the Prophet minutely was when the Prophet said that
following resurrection people will rise up from their graves as Allah had created
them and Aishah asked, Then they will all be naked and they
will see one another? He replied, The issues confronting them will
be far too grave for them to be looking at each other. It was thanks
to her intelligence that she never had the patience for an understanding of religion
that was irrational and inconsistent with the correct understanding of the Quran.
She had a principle firmly entrenched in her mind that the teachings of Islam
cannot be irrational and incoherent how can it be otherwise when Allah
says of the Quran, you will never find any incoherence in it!
Accordingly she rejected Ibn Umars narration from the Prophet, peace be
upon him, A person will be punished for his or her familys crying
(lamenting) over his or her death! Aishah rejected it outright
saying, How would the Prophet say something like this when Allah says, No
soul shall bear the burden of another! Then she went on to clarify
what she thought was the context of the Prophets statement. Another
example of the same critical understanding is her response to the so called report
that Three things that invalidate ones prayer are a dog, a donkey
and a woman. When Aishah heard this narration, she asked, how
dare you compare us women with dogs and donkeys when I myself did lie down to
sleep and the Prophet having woken up from sleep would pray in front of me, and
when it was time for him to prostrate he would push my legs gently to the side!
She also dismissed Ibn Umars order to the women of his household mandating
them to undo their hair while making ghusl saying, Why cant he then
order them to shave their heads? I used to bathe with the Prophet from a single
container and yet I did not do more than pouring water on my head three times!
Her Assertiveness Aishahs character is no
where best expressed than in her firm and resolute attitude in facing one of the
greatest of all trials she ever faced in her life: the false accusation of adultery.
When confronted with the situation she became extremely saddened and depressed
and yet she never cowered or stooped low. Instead, she firmly stood her ground
trusting in Allah alone until she was vindicated. While she had full confidence
that Allah would reveal her innocence, she never considered herself so great as
to be worthy of being vindicated by a direct revelation. When finally an entire
surah was revealed, numerous verses of which were directly related to her story
and extolled her purity, modesty and piety, she refused to rise up and thank Allahs
Messenger and instead simply said, I thank only Allah! By this she
did not mean to be rude to the Prophet, rather she meant never to attribute the
source of her relief to any other than the Source itself, which is Allah and Allah
alone! This should serve as a perfect example for all Muslims, men and women,
that they should not fear anyone but Allah and if they do this they will be not
cower themselves before anyone but Allah, no matter how great that worldly power
facing them may be! In fact this is the ultimate freedom that many of the early
Muslims enjoyed within themselves. Thanks to her assertiveness, Aishah
always stood up to what she thought was unjust, unethical and false. When she
heard that some individuals were finding faults with Abu Bakr after his death,
she gathered them all and spoke to them about his achievements as everyone would
readily recognize and then asked them plainly which one of his actions they were
critical of. None of his detractors had anything to say. She also stood up
to Caliphs such as Muawiyah and vocally criticized their policies which
she though was unjust and therefore un-Islamic. Another example of her forthrightness
is her answer to those who forbade women from visiting cemeteries. On her visit
to Makkah, when she stopped by the grave of her brother, someone objected to her
and asked how come she was visiting his grave when the Prophet had forbidden women
to do so, she replied, The Prophet had forbidden both men and women from
visiting graves in the early years of Islam, and then he lifted that prohibition
later. In other words, in her sound understanding the lifting of the ban
was applicable to both men and women, for there is no evidence to suggest that
it was only applicable to men. It was because of her strength of character
that she made the Caliph implement the will of Safiyyah, the mother of the faithful,
who had stipulated one third of her estate to her Jewish brother. When the Caliph
thought it was against the dictum of the Prophet, peace be upon him, Aishah
rejected that and obliged him to fulfil the wishes of Safiyyah. Her confidence
in the inherent justice of Islam enabled her to exercise many other interjections
into commonly held assumptions about womens roles in the Muslim community.
One such interjection was her wish not to be left out of performing Janazah prayers
(often reserved for men only in the minds of many Muslims - even today). She often
sent orders to bring the Janazah and place it inside the Mosque itself so that
the wives of the Prophet, peace be upon him, could also offer the prayers, at
a time when ordinarily Janazah was performed outside the precincts of the mosque
itself. An Active Participant in All Aspects of Islamic Life Aishah
serves as the best role model for womens activism in Islam for she never
was held back from full participation in any aspect of Islamic life even after
the death of the Prophet, peace be upon him. During his life she accompanied the
Prophet even to the battle fields to perform essential duties. She led
the war against Ali because of her mistaken judgement; although at the time she
thought she was going out to exact justice for the caliph Uthman who had been
martyred unjustly and she thought that Ali was harbouring his murderers. Later
on, she regretted her choice to have waged the war but the point is that according
to her, the role of women in Islam was not confined to the home and instead, that
they play an active role in Islamic life. Due to her own sound faith and Islamic
character, she recanted not her activism but her stand against Ali and it was
because of this that she thought she had become less worthy of being buried beside
the Prophet, peace be upon him, and preferred to join her own sisters (i.e. other
wives of the Prophet, peace be upon him) in Jannat al-baqi. Her Legacy
of Scholarship Aishahs sound scholarship in Islamic
disciplines such as tafsir, hadith, fiqh, history of Arabs and Islam, Arabic language
and medicine was proverbial among companions and successors as numerous testimonials
bear witness. We know that even the great companions of the Prophet such as Abu
Bakr and Umar as well as other wives of the Prophet, peace be upon him, would
refer to her as the final resource person in all such matters. Abu Salamah
b Abd al-Rahman, one of the seven famous jurists of Madinah, said, I never
knew of anyone-- who had such thorough knowledge of the traditions of the Prophet,
peace be upon, nor sound understanding of fiqh in any issue that Muslims would
need to know nor of any verse and when and where it was revealed or of rules of
inheritance --who can surpass Aishah. Aishah
served as a teacher of teachers after the Prophet, peace be upon him. She would
correct those who were teaching in the Prophets mosque and answer the many
who came to her seeking rulings, advice and opinions based on her expert knowledge.
Furthermore, among the numerous men and women who graduated under her tutorship
were Abd Allah, Qasim, Urwah, and Umrah bint Abd al-Rahman al-Ansariyyah.
Her thorough mastery of fiqh enabled her to exercise independent ijtihad in matters
of fiqh and she used to offer rulings based on her ijtihad as testified by al-Qasim
during the time of Abu Bakr, Umar and Uthman as well as after them until she died.
As indicated earlier, Aishahs ijtihad was governed strictly
by her deep knowledge of the Quran. One of the many examples of this was
when someone asked her about celibacy and she answered, Do not resort to
it for did you not hear Allah say in the Quran, We have sent before
you messengers and appointed for them spouses and children (Surah al-Rad:
38) thus do not resort to celibacy. The independence of her ijtihad
meant that she sometimes confidently held views contradicting the views of other
companions and scholars. When someone asked her if it was always necessary for
a woman to have a mahram to travel, Aishah asked rhetorically, Can
everyone find a mahram? Conclusion Aishahs
life is especially remarkable when examined with the lenses of contemporary times.
Surrounded by current examples of Muslim women around the world not permitted
to fully actualize their God-given potentials, Aishahs life
in the 6th and 7th century is a beacon to the inherent justice in Islam. She was
reared with authentic Islam from her earliest memories and yet she grew up to
be a woman who was confident, assertive and an active participant and leader of
her society. Simply put, Aishah lived a life outstanding in its
dedication to the cause of Allah and His Messenger. We can end with her own advice,
Whoever seeks to please people by displeasing Allah, Allah will abandon
him/her to people and whoever seeks to please Allah, Allah will be sufficient
for him/her.
Shaikh Ahmad Kutty is a senior lecturer and resident
scholar at the Islamic Institute of Toronto. article from: www.islamicinstitute.ca 
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