Undoubtedly children
are a source of great joy and delight;
they make life sweet, bring more rizq
into a family's life and give hope. A
father sees his children as a future
source of help and support, as well as
representing an increase in numbers and
perpetuation of the family. A mother
sees her children as a source of hope,
consolation and joy in life, and as hope
for the future. All of these hopes rest
on the good upbringing of the children
and giving them a sound preparation for
life, so that they will become active
and constructive elements in society, a
source of goodness for their parents,
community and society as a whole. Then
they will be as (SWT) described them:
( Wealth and sons
are allurements of the life of this
world . . .) (Qur'an 18:46)
If their education and
upbringing are neglected, they will
become bad characters, a burden on their
family, community and society as a
whole.
She understands the
great responsibility
that she has
towards her children
The Muslim woman never
forgets that the mother's responsibility
in bringing up the children and forming
their characters is greater than that of
the father, because children tend to be
closer to their mother and spend more
time with her; she knows all about their
behavioural, emotional and intellectual
development during their childhood and
the difficult years of adolescence.
Hence the woman who
understands the teachings of Islam and
her own educational role in life, knows
her complete responsibility for the
upbringing of her children, as is
referred to in the Qur'an:
( O you who believe!
Save yourselves and your families from
a Fire whose fuel is Men and Stones .
. .) (Qur'an 66:6)
The Prophet (PBUH) also
referred to this responsibility in his
hadith:
"Each of you is a
shepherd and each of you is
responsible for his flock. The leader
is a shepherd and is responsible for
his flock; a man is the shepherd of
his family and is responsible for his
flock; a woman is the shepherd in the
house of her husband and is
responsible for her flock; a servant
is the shepherd of his master's wealth
and is responsible for it. Each of you
is a shepherd and is responsible for
his flock."1
Islam places
responsibility on the shoulders of every
individual; not one person is left out.
Parents - especially mothers - are made
responsible for providing their children
with a solid upbringing and sound
Islamic education, based on the noble
characteristics that the Prophet (PBUH)
declared that he had been sent to
complete and spread among people:
"I have only been
sent to make righteous behaviour
complete."2
Nothing is more
indicative of the greatness of the
parents' responsibility towards their
children and their duty to give them a
suitable Islamic upbringing than the
verdict of the `ulama' that every
family should heed the words of the
Prophet (PBUH):
"Instruct your
children to pray when they are seven
and hit them if they do not do so when
they are ten."3
Any parents who are aware
of this hadith but do not teach their
children to pray when they reach seven
or hit them if they do not do so when
they reach ten, are parents who are
sinners and failing in their duty; they
will be responsible before Allah (SWT)
for their failure.
The family home is a
microcosm of society in which the
children's mentality, intellect,
attitudes and inclinations are formed
when they are still very small and are
ready to receive sound words of
guidance. Hence the parents' important
role in forming the minds of their sons
and daughters and directing them towards
truth and good deeds is quite clear.
Muslim woman have
always understood their responsibility
in raising their children, and they have
a brilliant record in producing and
influencing great men, and instilling
noble values in their hearts. There is
no greater proof of that than the fact
that intelligent and brilliant women
have produced more noble sons than have
intelligent and brilliant men, so much
so that you can hardly find any among
the great men of our ummah who
have controlled the course of events in
history who is not indebted to his
mother.
Al-Zubayr ibn al-`Awwam
was indebted for his greatness to his
mother Safiyyah bint `Abd al-Muttalib,
who instilled in him his good qualities
and distinguished nature.
`Abdullah, al-Mundhir
and `Urwah, the sons of al-Zubayr were
the products of the values instilled in
them by their mother, Asma' bint Abi
Bakr, and each of them made his mark in
history and attained a high status.
`Ali ibn Abi Talib (RAA)
received wisdom, virtue and good
character from his distinguished mother,
Fatimah bint Asad.
`Abdullah ibn Ja`far,
the master of Arab generosity and the
most noble of their leaders, lost his
father at an early age, but his mother
Asma' bint `Umays took care of him and
give him the virtues and noble
characteristics by virtue of which she
herself became one of the great women of
Islam.
Mu`awiyah ibn Abi
Sufyan inherited his strength of
character and intelligence from his
mother, Hind bint `Utbah, not from his
father Abu Sufyan. When he was a baby,
she noticed that he had intelligent and
clever features. Someone said to her,
"If he lives, he will become the
leader of his people." She
responded, "May he not live if he
is to become the leader of his people
alone!"
Mu`awiyah was unable
to instil his cleverness, patience and
skills in his own son and and heir,
Yazid, because the boy's mother was a
simple Bedouin woman, whom he had
married for her beauty and because of
the status of her tribe and family.
Mu`awiyah's brother
Ziyad ibn Abi Sufyan, who was a prime
example of intelligence, shrewdness and
quick-wittedness, was similarly unable
to pass these qualities on to his son `Ubayd-Allah
(SWT), who grew up to be stupid, clumsy,
impotent and ignorant. His mother was
Marjanah, a Persian woman who possessed
none of the qualities that might entitle
her to be the mother of a great man.
History records the
names of two great men of Banu Umayyah,
the first of whom was known for his
strength of character, capability,
intelligence, wisdom and decisiveness,
and the second of whom took the path of
justice, goodness, piety and
righteousness.
The first was `Abd al-Malik
ibn Marwan, whose mother was `A'ishah
bint al-Mughirah ibn Abi'l-`As ibn
Umayyah, who was well-known for her
strength of character, resolution and
intelligence. The second was `Umar ibn `Abd
al-`Aziz (RAA), the fifth of the khulafa'
al-rashidun, whose mother was Umm `Asim
bint `Asim ibn `Umar ibn al-Khattab, who
was the most noble in character of the
women of her time. Her mother was the
righteous worshipper of Allah (SWT) whom
`Asim saw was honest and truthful, and
clearly following the right path, when
she refused to add water to the milk as
her mother told her to, because she knew
that Allah (SWT) could see her.
If we turn towards
Andalusia, we find the brilliant,
ambitious ruler `Abd al-Rahman al-Nasir
who, having started life as an orphan,
went on to establish an Islamic state in
the West, to which the leaders and kings
of Europe surrendered and to whose
institutes of learning the scholars and
philosophers of all nations came to seek
knowledge. This state made a great
contribution to worldwide Islamic
culture. If we were to examine the
secret of this man's greatness, we would
find that it lay in the greatness of his
mother who knew how to instil in him the
dynamic spirit of ambition.
During the `Abbasid
period there were two great women who
planted the seeds of ambition,
distinction and ascendancy in their
sons. The first was the mother of Ja`far
ibn Yahya, who was the wazir of
the khalifah Harun al-Rashid. The
second was the mother of Imam al-Shafi`i:
he never saw his father who died whilst
he was still a babe in arms; it was his
mother who took care of his education.
There are many such
examples of brilliant women in our
history, women who instilled in their
sons nobility of character and the seeds
of greatness, and who stood behind them
in everything they achieved of power and
status.
She uses the best
methods in bringing them up
The intelligent Muslim
woman understandsthe psychology of her
childre, and is aware of their
differences in attitudes and
inclination. She tries to penetrate
their innocent world and plant the seeds
of noble values and worthy
characteristics, using the best and most
effective methods of parenting.
The mother is
naturally close to her children, and she
endears herself to them so that they
will be open with her and will share
their thoughts and feelings with her.
She hastens to correct them and refine
their thoughts and feelings, taking into
account each child's age and mental
level. She plays and jokes with them
sometimes, complimenting them and
letting then hear words of love,
affection, compassion and self-denial.
Thus their love for her increases, and
they will accept her words of guidance
and correction eagerly. They will obey
her out of love for her, for there is a
great difference between sincere
obedience that comes from the heart,
which is based on love, respect and
trust, and insincere obedience that is
based on oppression, violence and force.
The former is lasting obedience, strong
and fruitful, whilst the latter is
shallow and baseless, and will quickly
vanish when the violence and cruelty
reach extreme levels.
She demonstrates
her love and
affection for them
The Muslim woman is
not ignorant of the fact that her
children need her warm lap, deep love
and sincere affection in order to
develop soundly, with no psychological
problems, crises or complexes. This
sound upbringing will fill them with
optimism, trust, hope and ambition. Thus
the caring Muslim mother demonstrates
her love and affection for her children
on every occasion, flooding their lives
with joy and happiness and filling their
hearts with confidence and security.
The true Muslim woman
is compassionate towards her children,
for compassion is a basic Islamic
characteristic, one that was encouraged
by the Prophet (PBUH) in word and deed
as Anas (RAA) tells us:
"I never saw
anyone who was more compassionate
towards children than the Messenger of
Allah (PBUH). His son Ibrahim was in
the care of a wet-nurse in the hills
around Madinah. He would go there, and
we would go with him, and he would
enter the house, pick up his son and
kiss him, then come back."4
The Prophet's
compassion and love towards Muslim
children included little ones at play.
He would flood them with his
compassion and affection. Anas (RAA)
reported that whenever the Prophet (PBUH)
passed by a group of boys he would
smile fondly and greet them.5
An example of the
Prophet's enduring wisdom with regard to
the upbringing of children is the hadith:
"He is not one of
us who does not show compassion to our
little ones and recognize the rights
of our elders."6
Abu Hurayrah (RAA)
narrated that the Prophet (PBUH)
kissed al-Hasan ibn `Ali. Al-Aqra` ibn
Habis said, "I have ten children
and I have never kissed any of
them." The Prophet (PBUH) said:
"He who does not show mercy will
not be shown mercy."7
The Prophet (PBUH), this
great educator, always sought to instil
the quality of mercy and compassion in
people's hearts, and to awaken their
potential for love and affection, which
are the most basic of human
characteristics.
One day a Bedouin came
and asked the Prophet (PBUH), "Do
you kiss your sons? We do not."
The Prophet (PBUH) said, "What
can I do for you if Allah (SWT) has
removed mercy from your heart?"8
`A'ishah (May Allah be
pleased with her) reported:
"Whenever Fatimah
came into the room, the Prophet (PBUH)
would stand up, welcome her, kiss her
and offer her his seat, and whenever
he came into the room, she would stand
up, take his hand, welcome him, kiss
him and offer him her seat. When she
came to see him during his final
illness, he welcomed her and kissed
her."9
The Prophet (PBUH)
praised the women of Quraysh, because
they were the most compassionate of
women towards their children, the most
concerned with raising them properly and
making sacrifices for them, in addition
to taking good care of their husbands.
This may be seen in the words narrated
by Bukhari from Abu Hurayrah (RAA), who
said:
"I heard the
Messenger of Allah (PBUH) say: `The
women of Quraysh are the best women
ever to ride camels. They are
compassionate towards their children
and the most careful with regard to
their husbands' wealth"10
In the light of this
guidance, the true Muslim woman cannot
be stern towards her children and treat
them in a rough or mean fashion, even if
it is her nature to be grim and
reserved, because this religion, with
its enlightenment and guidance, softens
hearts and awakens feelings of love and
affection. So our children are a part of
us, going forth into the world, as the
poet Hittan ibn al-Mu`alla said:
"Our children are
our hearts, walking among us on the face
of the earth, if even a little breeze
touches them, we cannot sleep for
worrying about them."11
Parents should be
filled with love, affection and care,
willing to make sacrifices and do their
best for their children.
Undoubtedly the wealth
of emotion that the Muslim mother feels
for her children is one of the greatest
causes of her happiness in life. This is
something which has been lost by Western
women, who are overwhelmed by
materialism and exhausted by the daily
grind of work, which has caused them to
lose the warmth of family feelings. This
was vividly expressed by Mrs. Salma al-Haffar,
a member of the Syrian women's movement,
after she had visited America:
"It is truly a
shame that women lose the most precious
thing that nature12 has given
them, i.e. their femininity, and then
their happiness, because the constant
cycle of exhausting work has caused them
to lose the small paradise which is the
natural refuge of women and men alike,
one that can only flourish under the
care of a mother who stays at home. The
happiness of individuals and society as
a whole is to be found at home, in the
lap of the family; the family is the
source of inspiration, goodness and
creativity."13
She treats her sons
and daughters equally
The wise Muslim woman
treats all her children fairly and
equally. She does not prefer one of them
over another in any way, because she
knows that Islam forbids such actions on
the part of the parents, and because of
the negative psychological impact that
this may have over the child whose
sibling is preferred over him. The child
who feels that he is not treated equally
with his brothers and sisters will grow
up with complexes and anxiety, eating
his heart out with jealousy and hatred.
In contrast, the child who grows up
feeling that he and his siblings are
treated equally will grow up healthy and
free from jealousy and hatred; he will
be content, cheerful, tolerant and
willing to put others before himself.
This is what Islam requires of parents
and urges them to do.
Bukhari, Muslim and
others report that the father of
al-Nu`man ibn Bashir (RAA) brought him
to the Prophet (PBUH) and said,
"I have given this son of mine a
slave I have." The Prophet (PBUH)
said, "Have you given each of
your children the same?" He said,
"No." The Prophet (PBUH)
told him, "Then take the slave
back."
According to another
report:
"The Prophet
(PBUH) asked, `Have you done the same
for all your children?' [My father]
said, `No,' so the Prophet (PBUH)
said, `Fear Allah (SWT) and treat all
of your children equally.'"
According to a third
report:
"The Prophet
(PBUH) asked, `O Bishr, do you have
any other children?' He said, `Yes.'
The Prophet (PBUH) asked, `Will you
give a similar gift to each of them?'
He said, `No.' So the Prophet (PBUH)
said, `Do not ask me to witness this,
because I do not want to witness
unfairness.' Then he added, `Would you
not like all your children to treat
you with equal respect?' [Bishr] said,
`Of course.' The Prophet (PBUH) told
him, `So do not do it.'"14
So the Muslim woman who
truly fears Allah (SWT) treats all her
children with equal fairness, and does
not favour one above the other in giving
gifts, spending money on them, or in the
way she treats them. Then all of them
will love her, will pray for her and
will treat her with kindness and
respect.
She does not
discriminate between sons and daughters
her affection and
care
The true Muslim woman
does not discriminate between her sons
and daughters in her affection and car,
as do some women who are not free from
the effects of a jahili
mentality. She is fair to all her
children, boys and girls alike, and
cares for them all with compassion and
love. She understands that children are
a gift from Allah (SWT), and that
Allah's (SWT) gift, be it of sons or
daughters, cannot be rejected or
changed:
( . . . He bestows
[children] male or female according to
His Will [and Plan], or He bestows
both males and females, and He leaves
barren Whom He will: for He is full of
knowledge and power.) (Qur'an
42:49-50)
The Muslim woman who is
truly guided by her religion does not
forget the great reward that Allah (SWT)
has prepared for the one who brings up
daughters and takes care of them
properly, as is stated in numerous sahih
hadith, for example the hadith
narrated by Bukhari from `A'ishah (May
Allah be pleased with her) in which she
says:
"A woman came to
me with her two daughters and asked me
(for charity). She found that I had
nothing except for a single date,
which I gave to her. She took it and
divided it between her two daughters,
and did not eat any of it herself,
then she got up and left with her
daughters. The Prophet (PBUH) came in
and I told him what had happened.
The Prophet (PBUH)
said, "Whoever is tested with
daughters and treats them well, they
will be for him a shield against the
Fire of Hell."15
According to another
report narrated by Muslim from `A'ishah
(May Allah be pleased with her), she
said:
"A poor woman came
to me carrying her two daughters. I
gave her three dates to eat. She gave
each child a date, and raised the
third to her own mouth to eat it. Her
daughters asked her to give it to
them, so she split the date that she
had wanted to eat between them. I was
impressed by what she had done, and
told the Messenger of Allah (PBUH)
about it. He said, "Allah (SWT)
has decreed Paradise for her because
of it," or, "He has saved
her from Hell because of it."16
Abu Hurayrah (RAA)
reported that the Prophet (PBUH) said:
"Whoever has three
daughters, and shelters them, bearing
their joys and sorrows with patience,
Allah (SWT) will admit him to Paradise
by virtue of his compassion towards
them." A man asked, "What if
he has only two, O Messenger of
Allah?" He said, "Even if
they are only two." Another man
asked, "What if he has only one,
O Messenger of Allah?" He said,
"Even if he has only one."17
Ibn `Abbas (RAA) said:
"The Messenger of
Allah (PBUH) said: `Whoever had a
daughter born to him, and he did not
bury her alive or humiliate her, and
he did not prefer his son over her,
Allah (SWT) will admit him to Paradise
because of her."18
The Prophet's compassion
extended to females, and included
sisters as well as daughters, as is seen
in the hadith narrated by Bukhari in al-Adab
al-Mufrad from Abu Sa`id al-Khudri,
who said:
"The Prophet
(PBUH) said: `There is no-one who has
three daughters, or three sisters, and
he treats them well, but Allah (SWT)
will admit him to Paradise."19
According to a report
given by al-Tabarani, the Prophet (PBUH)
said:
"There is no one
among my ummah who has three
daughters, or three sisters, and he
supports them until they are grown up,
but he will be with me in Paradise like
this -" and he held up his index
and middle fingers together.20
No wise mother
complains about bringing up daughters,
or prefers her sons over them, if she
listens to the teachings of the Prophet
(PBUH) which raise the status of
daughters and promise Paradise as wide
as heaven and earth and the company of
the Prophet (PBUH) to the one who brings
them up and treats them properly!
In the Muslim family,
and in the true Islamic society, girls
are protected, loved and respected. In
the warm bosom of her parents
-especially her mother - a girl will
always find protection and care, no
matter how long she stays in the home of
her parents, brothers or other family
members who should support her, whether
she is married or not. Islam has
guaranteed girls a life of protection,
pride and support, and has spared them
from a life of humiliation, need, want
and having to earn a living, such as is
the lot of women living in societies
that have gone astray from the guidance
of Allah (SWT). In those countries, a
girl barely reaches the age of eighteen
before she leaves the comfort of her
parents' home to face the hardships of a
life filled with difficulties and risks
at the time when she is most in need of
protection, compassion and care.
There is a huge
difference between the laws of Allah
(SWT), which came to bring happiness to
mankind, and the imperfect man-made laws
which cause nothing but misery.
It comes as no
surprise that in the West, as a result
of these materialistic laws, we see
armies of promiscuous young men and
hordes of unfortunate, miserable,
unmarried young mothers, the numbers of
which are increasing exponentially day
by day.
She does not pray
against her children
The wise Muslim woman
does not pray against her own children,
heeding the words of the Prophet (PBUH)
who forbade such prayers lest they be
offered at a time when prayers are
answered. This was stated in the lengthy
hadith narrated by Jabir in which the
Prophet (PBUH) said:
"Do not pray
against yourselves, or against your
children, or against your wealth, in
case you say such words at a time when
Allah (SWT) will answer your
prayer."21
Praying against one's
own children is not a good habit. No
mother does so at a time of anger, but
she will regret it later on after she
has calmed down. I do not think that a
mother who has truly sought the guidance
of Islam would lose her mind and her
equilibrium to such an extent that she
would pray against her own children, no
matter what they did. Such a woman would
not allow herself to indulge in
something that is done only by foolish,
hot-tempered women.
She is alert to
everything that may have
an influence on
them
The smart Muslim
mother keeps her eyes open as far as her
children are concerned. She knows what
they are reading and writing, the
hobbies and activities they persue, the
friends they have chosen, and the places
they go to in their free time. She knows
all of this without her children feeling
that she is watching them. If she finds
anything objectionable in their hobbies,
reading-materials, etc., or if she sees
them hanging around with undesirable
friends, or going to unsuitable places,
or taking up bad habits such as smoking,
or wasting time and energy on haram
games that teach them to get used to
trivialities, she hastens to correct her
children in a gentle and wise manner,
and persuades them to return to the
straight and narrow. The mother is more
able to do this than the father, because
she spends much more time with the
children, and they are more likely to
open up and share their thoughts and
feelings with her than with their
father. Hence it is quite clear that the
mother has a great responsibility to
bring up her children properly and form
their characters in a sound fashion, in
accordance with Islamic principles,
values and traditions.
Every child is born in
a state of fitrah (the natural,
good, disposition of mankind), and it is
the parents who make him into a Jew, a
Christian or a Magian, as the Prophet
(PBUH) said in the sahih hadith
narrated by Bukhari.
There is no secret
about the enormous impact the parents
have on the personality and
psychological development of their child
from the earliest years until the child
attains the age of reason.
The books that
children read should open their minds
and form their personalities well,
giving them the highest examples to
follow; they should not corrupt their
minds and extinguish the light of
goodness in their souls.
Hobbies should help to
develop the positive aspects of a
child's nature and reinforce good
tastes, not encourage any negative
tendancies.
Friends should be of
the type that will lead one to Paradise,
not to Hell; they should influence a
child in a positive way and encourage
him to do good, to strive to improve
himself and to succeed, not drag him
dowinto sin, disobedience and failure.
How many people have been brought to the
slippery slope of destruction and
perdition by their friends, whilst their
mothers and fathers were unaware of what
was to their own children! How wise are
the words of the poet `Adiyy ibn Zayd
al-`Ibadi concerning friends:
"If you are among
people, then make friends with the best
of them.
Do not make friends
with the worst of them lest you become
as bad as he is.
Do not ask about the
man, but ask about his friends, for
every person is influenced by his
friends."22
The true Muslim mother
takes notice of her children's books,
magazines, hobbies, school, teachers,
clubs, media interests, and everything
that may have an impact on their
personalities, minds, souls and faith.
She intervenes when necessary, either to
encourage or to put a stop to something,
so that the children's upbringing will
not be affected by corruption or
sickness.
Successful upbringing
of children depends on a mother who is
alert and intelligent, and understands
her responsibility towards her children,
so that she does a good job and raises
children who will be a boon to their
parents and society in general. Families
that fail to raise their children
properly usually do so because the
mother does not understand her
responsibility towards her children, so
she neglects them and they become a
source of evil and a torment to their
parents and others.
Children would not
become a source of evil if their
parents, especially the mother, knew
their responsibility and took it
seriously.
She instils good
behaviour and attitudes in them
The Muslim woman tries
hard to instil in her children's hearts
the best qualities, such as loving
others, upholding the ties of kinship,
caring for the weak, respecting elders,
showing compassion to little ones,
deriving satisfaction from doing good,
being sincere in word and deed, keeping
promises, judging fairly, and all other
good and praiseworthy characteristics.
The wise Muslim woman
knows how to reach her children's hearts
and instil these worthy qualities, using
the best and most effective methods,
such as setting a good example, coming
down to their level, treating them well,
encouraging them, advising and
correcting them, and being
compassionate, kind, tolerant, loving,
and fair. She is gentle without being
too lenient, and is strict without being
harsh. Thus the children receive a
proper upbringing, and grow up
open-minded, mature, righteous, sincere,
good, able to give and prepared to make
a constructive contribution in all
aspects of life. Not surprisingly, the
Muslim mother's upbringing produces the
best results, for she is the first
school and the first teacher, as the
poet said:
"The mother is a
school: if you prepare her properly, you
will prepare an entire people of good
character, The mother is the first
teacher, foremost among them, and the
best of teachers."23
Footnotes:
(Bukhari and
Muslim), See Sharh al-Sunnah, 10/61,
Kitab al-imarah wa'l-qada', bab
al-ra'i mas'ul 'an ri'atihi.
Reported by Bukhari
in al-Adab al-Mufrad, 1/371, bab
husn al-khulq.
Reported by Ahmad,
2/187, and by Abu Dawud with a hasan
isnad, 1/193, Kitab al-salat, bab
mata yu'mar al-ghulam bi'l-salat
Sahih Muslim,
15/75, Kitab al-fada'il, bab
rahmatihi (r) wa tawadu'ihi.
(Bukhari and
Muslim), See Sharh al-Sunnah,
12/264, Kitab al-isti'dhan, bab
al-taslim 'ala'l-subyan.
Reported by Ahmad,
2/185, and by al-Hakim, 1/62, Kitab
al-iman; its isnad is sahih.
(Bukhari and
Muslim), Sharh al-Sunnah, 13/34,
Kitab al-birr wa'l-silah, bab rahmah
al-walad wa taqbilihi.
Fath al-Bari,
10/426, Kitab al-adab, bab rahmah
al-walad wa taqbilihi.
See Fath al-Bari,
8/135, Kitab al-maghazi, bab
maraduhu (r) wa wafatuhu; Abu Dawud,
4/480, Kitab al-adab, bab ma ja'a
fi'l-qiyam.
Fath al-Bari,
6/472, Kitab ahadith al-anbiya', bab
qawlihi ta'ala, 45-48 min Al 'Imran.
Abu Tammam,
al-Hamasah, 1/167.
In fact it is Allah
Who gives these things, not nature.
This expression is one of the
effects of Westernization. [Author]
From an article by
Salma al-Haffar in the Damacus
newspaper al-Ayyam, 3/9/1962.
(Bukhari and
Muslim), See Sharh al-Sunnah, 8/296,
Kitab al-'ataya wa'l-hadaya, bab
al-ruju' fi hibbah al-walad
wa'l-taswiyyah bayna al-awlad
fi'l-nahl.
(Bukhari and
Muslim), See Sharh al-Sunnah, 6/187,
Kitab al-zakah, bab fadl al-sadaqah
'ala'l-awlad wa'l-aqarib.
Sahih Muslim,
16/179, Kitab al-birr wa'l-silah,
bab al-ihsan ila'l-banat.
Reported by Ahmad,
2/335 and al-Hakim, 4/176, Kitab
al-birr wa'l-silah. He said: its
isnad is sahih.
Reported by
al-Hakim in al-Mustadrak 4/177,
Kitab al-birr wa'l-silah. He said:
its isnad is sahih.
Reported by Bukhari
in al-Adab al-Mufrad, 1/162, bab man
'ala thalatha ihkawat.
Reported by
al-Tabarani in al-Awsat with two
isnads; the narrators of the first
isnad are rijal al-sahih. See Majma'
al-Zawa'id, 8/157.
Sahih Muslim,
18/139, Kitab al-zuhd, bab hadith
Jabir al-tawil.
See Adiyy ibn Zayd
al-'Ibadi: al-Sha'ir al-Mubtakir, by
the author, pp. 171-172.
Diwan Hafiz
Ibrahim, 282. Published by Dar
al-Kutub al-Misriyyah.
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