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Salman al-Farisi
May Allah Be Well Pleased With
Him
"My heart has become able to wear all forms:
A pasture for gazelles, a monastery for monks,
A temple for idols, the Kacba of the pilgrims,
The tablets of Torah, the Book of Qur'an.
I profess the religion of Love.
Whatever direction its mount may take,
Love is my Religion and my Belief."
Ibn cArabi, Tarjuman al-ashwaq.
Salman al-Farisi is known as the Imam,
the Flag of Flags, the Inheritor of Islam, the Wise Judge,
the Knowledgeable Scholar, and One of the House of the Prophet
. These were all titles the Prophet gave him. He stood fast
in the face of extreme difficulties and hardships to carry
the Light of Lights and to spread the secrets of hearts to
lift people from darkness to light. He was a noble companion
of the Prophet . He reported sixty of his sayings.
He came from a highly respected Zoroastrian
family from a town near Ispahan. One day while passing by
a church, he was attracted by the voices of men praying. Drawn
by their worship, he ventured in and found it better than
the religion of his upbringing. On learning that the religion
originated in Syria, he left home, against his father's wishes,
went to Syria and associated himself with a succession of
Christian anchorites. He came to know from them the coming
of the last Prophet and the signs accompanying his advent.
He then traveled to Hijaz where he was seized, sold into slavery,
and taken to Madina, where he eventually met the Prophet .
When he found in the Prophet the fulfillment of all the signs
of which he had been informed by his Christian teachers, he
affirmed the testification of faith - Shahada. Servitude prevented
Salman from being at the battles of Badr and Uhud. The Apostle
helped him gain his release from slavery by planting with
his own hand three hundred palm trees and giving him a large
piece of gold. Once a free man he took part in every subsequent
battle with the Prophet .
In Ibn Ishaq's Sirat Rasul Allah,
we find the following in Salman's account to the Prophet of
his journey in search of the true religion:
"Asim ibn Umar ibn Qatada said
that he was told that Salman the Persian told the Prophet
that his master in 'Ammuriya told him to go to a certain place
in Syria where there was a man who lived between two thickets.
Every year as he used to go from one to the other, the sick
used to stand in his way and everyone he prayed for was healed.
He said, "Ask him about this religion which you seek,
for he can tell you of it." So I went on until I came
to the place I had been told of, and I found that people had
gathered there with their sick until he came out to them that
night passing from one thicket to the other. The people came
to him with their sick and everyone he prayed for was healed.
They prevented me from getting to him so that I could not
approach him until he entered the thicket he was making for,
but I took hold of his shoulder. He asked me who I was as
he turned to me and I said, "God have mercy on you, tell
me about the Hanifiya, the religion of Abraham." He replied,
"You are asking about something men do not inquire of
today; the time has come near when a prophet will be sent
with this religion from the people of the haram. Go to him,
for he will bring you to it." Then he went into the thicket.
The Prophet said to Salman, "If you have told me the
truth, you met Jesus the son of Mary."
In one of the Prophet's battles called
al-Ah zab or al-Khandaq Salman advised the Prophet to dig
trenches around Madinah in defense of the city, a suggestion
which the Prophet happily accepted. He then went ahead and
helped the digging with his own hands. During this excavation,
Salman struck upon a rock which he was unable to break. The
Prophet took an axe and hit it. The first strike brought forth
a spark. He then hit it a second time and brought forth a
second spark. He then struck for the third time and brought
forth a third spark. He then asked Salman , " O Salman,
did you see those sparks?" Salman replied, "Yes,
O Prophet, indeed I did." The Prophet said, "The
first spark gave me a vision in which Allah has opened Yemen
for me. With the second spark, Allah opened Sham and al-Maghreb
(the West). And with the third one, Allah opened for me the
East."
Salman reported that the Prophet said:
"Nothing but supplication averts the decree, and nothing
but righteousness increases life," and "Your Lord
is munificent and generous, and is ashamed to turn away empty
the hands of a servant when he raises them to him." Tirmidhi
transmitted them.
At-Tabari recounts that in the year
16 A.H. the Muslim army turned to the Persian front. In order
to confront the Persian king at one point the Muslim army
found itself on the opposite bank of the great Tigris River.
The commander of the army, Sacd Ibn Abi Waqqas, following
a dream, ordered the entire army to plunge into the rushing
river. Many people were afraid and hung back. Sacd, with Salman
by his side, prayed first: "May Allah grant us victory
and defeat His enemy." Then Salman prayed: "Islam
generates good fortune. By Allah, crossing rivers has become
as easy for the Muslims as crossing deserts. By Him in whose
hand lies Salman's soul, may the soldiers emerge from the
water in the same numbers in which they entered it."
Sad and Salman then plunged into the Tigris. It is reported
that the river was covered with horses and men. The horses
swam and when they tired the river floor seemed to rise up
and support them until they regained their breath. To some
it seemed that the horses rode effortlessly on the waves.
They emerged on the other bank, as Salman had prayed, having
lost nothing from their equipment but one tin cup, and no
one having drowned.
They went on to take the Persian capital.
Salman acted as spokesman and said to the conquered Persians:
"I have the same origin as you. I shall be compassionate
toward you. You have three options. You may embrace Islam,
then you will be our brethren and you will have the same privileges
and obligations as we. Or you may pay the Jizyah tax and we
will govern you fairly. Or we will declare war on you."
The Persians, having witnessed the miraculous crossing of
the Muslim army, accepted the second alternative.
Salman Al-Farsi was eventually appointed
governor of that region. He was the commander of 30,000 Muslim
troops. Yet, he was very humble. He lived from his own manual
labor. He did not own a house, but instead rested under the
shade of trees. He used to say that he was surprised to observe
so many people spending all their life for the lower world,
without a thought for the inevitable death which will take
them from the world one day.
Salman was a very strict and just
man. Among some spoils which were distributed one day was
cloth out of which each companion had one piece of clothing
cut. One day Umar got up to speak and said: Lower your voices
so that I may hear you. He was wearing two pieces of that
cloth. Salman said, By God, we will not hear you, because
you prefer yourself to your people. How is that? asked Umar.
He said: You are wearing two pieces of cloth and everyone
else is weraing only one. Umar called out: O Abdullah! No
one answered him. He said again, O Abdullah ibn Umar! Abdullah,
his son called out: At your service! Umar said, I ask you
by God, don't you say that the second piece is yours? Abdullah
said Yes. Salman said: Now we shall hear you.
At night Salman would begin to pray.
If he got tired, he would start making dhikr by tongue. When
his tongue would get tired, he would contemplate and meditate
on Allah's power and greatness in creation. He would then
say to himself, O my ego, you took your rest, now get up and
pray. Then he would make dhikr again, then meditate, and so
forth all night long.
Bukhara relates two hadiths which
show the Prophet's consideration for Salman:
Abu Huraira relates: While we were
sitting with the Holy Prophet , surat al-Jumuca was revealed
to him. When the Prophet recited the verse, "And He (Allah)
has sent him (Mu ammad) also to others (than the Arabs)..."
[62:3] I said, "Who are they, O Allah's Apostle?"
The Prophet did not reply till I repeated my question thrice.
At that time Salman al-Farisi was with us. Allah's Apostle
put his hand on Salman, saying: "If faith were at ath-Thurayya
(the Pleiades, very distant stars), even then some men from
these people (i.e. Salman's folk) would attain it."
Abu Juhayfa relates: The Prophet made
a bond of brotherhood between Salman and Abu Darda al-Ansari
. Salman paid a visit to Abu Darda' and found Um Darda' (his
wife) dressed in shabby clothes. He asked her why she was
in that state. She said, "Your brother Abu Darda' is
not interested in the luxuries of this world." In the
meantime Abu Darda' came and prepared a meal for Salman. Salman
requested Abu Darda' to eat with him, but Abu Darda' said,
"I am fasting." Salman said, "I am not going
to eat unless you eat." So Abu Darda' ate with Salman.
When it was night and a part of the night has passed, Abu
Darda' got up (to offer the night prayer), but Salman told
him to sleep and Abu Darda slept. After some time Abu Darda'
again got up but Salman told him to sleep. When it was the
last hours of the night, Salman told him to get up then, and
both of them offered the prayer. Salman told Abu Darda', "Your
Lord has a right on you, your soul has a right on you, and
your family has a right on you. Abu Darda' came to the Prophet
and narrated the whole story. The Prophet said, "Salman
has spoken the truth."
He passed away in 33 A.H. during the
reign of cUthman . He passed his Secret on to Abu Bakr's grandson,
Imam Abu Abdur Rahman Qassim ibn Muhammad ibn Abi Bakr as-Siddiq
.
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