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Farewell Sermon

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Farewell Sermon
The Farewell Sermon (Arabic: ‫ﺧﻄﺒﺔ اﻟﻮداع‬, Khuṭbatu l-Widāʿ ) also known as Muhammad's Final
Sermon or the Last Sermon, is a religious speech, delivered by the Islamic prophet Muhammad on Friday the
9th of Dhu al-Hijjah, 10 AH (6 March 632[1]) in the Uranah valley of Mount Arafat, during the Islamic
pilgrimage of Hajj. Muhammad al-Bukhari refers to the sermon and quotes part of it in his Sahih alBukhari.[2][3][4] Part of it is also present in Sahih Muslim[5] and Sunan Abu Dawood.[6] Verse 5:3 (https://ww
w.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A2002.02.0006%3Asura%3D5%3Averse%3D3),
"Today I have perfected for you your religion ...", is believed to have been recited during the address as the
capstone verse of the Quran.[7] Various versions of the sermon have been published, including several English
translations. The sermon consists of a series of general exhortations for Muslims to follow the teachings that
Muhammad had set forth in the Quran and sunnah.
Contents
Narrations in hadith literature
Sahih Muslim Book 15, Hadith 159
Sunan al-Tirmidhi Vol. 1, Book 7, Hadith 1163
Sunan ibn Maja Vol. 3, Book 9, Hadith 1851
Report by historian Ibn Ishaq
Report by Al-Jahiz
See also
References
Narrations in hadith literature
In a lengthy hadith included in the Sahih Muslim, Sunan Abi Dawood, and Sunan Ibn Majah, Jabir ibn Abd
Allah narrated details of Muhammad's pilgrimage and reported the following words of his sermon:
Sahih Muslim Book 15, Hadith 159
Ja'far b. Muhammad reported on the authority of his father:
We went to Jabir b. Abdullah and he began inquiring about the people (who had
gone to see him) till it was my turn. I said: I am Muhammad b. 'Ali b. Husain. [...] I
said to him: Tell me about the Hajj of Allah's Messenger (May peace be upon
him). And he pointed with his hand nine, and then stated:
[...] The Messenger of Allah (‫[ )ﷺ‬...] came to the bottom of the valley, and
addressed the people saying:
Verily your blood, your property are as sacred and inviolable as the
sacredness of this day of yours, in this month of yours, in this town of
yours. Behold! Everything pertaining to the Days of Ignorance is under
my feet completely abolished. Abolished are also the blood-revenges
of the Days of Ignorance. The first claim of ours on blood-revenge
which I abolish is that of the son of Rabi'a b. al-Harith, who was
nursed among the tribe of Sa'd and killed by Hudhail. And the usury of
the pre-Islamic period is abolished, and the first of our usury I abolish
is that of 'Abbas b. 'Abd al-Muttalib, for it is all abolished. Fear Allah
concerning women! Verily you have taken them on the security of
Allah, and intercourse with them has been made lawful unto you by
words of Allah. You too have right over them, and that they should not
allow anyone to sit on your bed whom you do not like. But if they do
that, you can chastise them but not severely. Their rights upon you are
that you should provide them with food and clothing in a fitting manner.
I have left among you the Book of Allah, and if you hold fast to it, you
would never go astray. And you would be asked about me (on the Day
of Resurrection), (now tell me) what would you say? They (the
audience) said: We will bear witness that you have conveyed (the
message), discharged (the ministry of Prophethood) and given wise
(sincere) counsel. He (the narrator) said: He (the Holy Prophet) then
raised his forefinger towards the sky and pointing it at the people
(said): "O Allah, be witness. O Allah, be witness," saying it thrice.[8]
Sunan al-Tirmidhi Vol. 1, Book 7, Hadith 1163
Sulaiman bin Amr bin Al-Ahwas said:
My father narrated to me that he witnessed the farewell Hajj with the Messenger of
Allah. So he thanked and praised Allah and he reminded and gave admonition.
He mentioned a story in his narration and he (the Prophet) said: “And indeed I
order you to be good to the women, for they are but captives[9] with you over
whom you have no power than that, except if they come with manifest Fahishah
(evil behavior). If they do that, then abandon their beds and beat them with a
beating that is not harmful. And if they obey you then you have no cause against
them. Indeed you have rights over your women, and your women have rights over
you. As for your rights over your women, then they must not allow anyone whom
you dislike to treat on your bedding (furniture), nor to admit anyone in your home
that you dislike. And their rights over you are that you treat them well in clothing
them and feeding them.[9]
Sunan ibn Maja Vol. 3, Book 9, Hadith 1851
It was narrated that:
Sulaiman bin Amr bin Ahwas said:
“My father told me that he was present on the Farewell pilgrimage with the
Messenger of Allah. He praised and glorified Allah, and reminder and
exhorted (the people). Then he said: 'I enjoin good treatment of women, for
they are prisoners[10] with you, and you have no right to treat them
otherwise, unless they commit clear indecency. If they do that, then forsake
them in their beds and hit them, but without causing injury or leaving a mark.
If they obey you, then do not seek means of annoyance against them. You
have rights over your women and your women have rights over you. Your
rights over your women are that they are not to allow anyone whom you
dislike on treat on your bedding (furniture), not allow anyone whom you
dislike to enter your houses. And their right over you are that should treat
them kindly with regard to their clothing and food.[10]
Report by historian Ibn Ishaq
An account of the sermon was collected by the early historian Ibn Ishaq, as quoted in Ibn Hisham's Sirah anNabawiyah[11] and at-Tabari's Tarikh,[12] with minor differences. The narration is translated by I. K.
Poonawala in The History of al-Tabari, vol. IX: The Last Years of the Prophet (1990), as follows:
Ibn Ḥumayd—Salamah—Ibn Isḥāq—‘Abdallāh b. Abī Najīḥ: Then the Messenger of God
proceeded to perform his pilgrimage, showing the people its rites and teaching them its customs.
Then he addressed them in a speech and elucidated [certain things]. After he had praised and
glorified God, he said, "O people, listen to my words. I do not know whether I shall ever meet
you again in this place after this year. O people, your blood and your property are sacrosanct until
you meet your Lord, just as this day and this month of yours are sacred. Surely you will meet
your Lord and He will question you about your deeds. I have [already] made this known. Let he
who has a pledge return it to the one who entrusted him with it; all usury is abolished, but your
capital belongs to you. Wrong not and you shall not be wronged. God has decreed that there will
be no usury, and the usury of ‘Abbās b. ‘Abd al-Muṭṭalib is abolished, all of it. All blood shed in
the pre-Islamic days is to be left unavenged. The first such claim I revoke is that of Ibn Rabī‘ah b.
al-Ḥārith b. ‘Abd al-Muṭṭalib, who was nursed among the Banū Layth and was slain by the Banū
Hudhayl. His is the first blood shed in the pre-Islamic days with which I shall set an example. O
people, indeed Satan despairs of ever being worshipped in this land of yours. He will be pleased,
however, if he is obeyed in a thing other than that, in matters you minimize. So beware of him in
your religion, O people, intercalating a month is an increase in unbelief whereby the unbelievers
go astray; one year they make it profane, and hallow it another, [in order] to agree with the
number that God has hallowed, and so profane what God has hallowed, and hallow what God
has made profane. Time has completed its cycle [and is] as it was on the day that God created the
heavens and the earth. The number of the months with God is twelve: [they were] in the Book of
God on the day He created the heavens and the earth. Four of them are sacred, the three
consecutive [months] and the Rajab [which is called the month of] Muḍar, which is between
Jumādā [II] and Sha‘bān." "Now then, O people, you have a right over your wives and they have
a right over you. You have [the right] that they should not cause anyone of whom you dislike to
tread on your beds; and that they should not commit any open indecency (fāḥishah). If they do,
then God permits you to shut them in separate rooms and to beat them, but not severely. If they
abstain from [evil], they have the right to their food and clothing in accordance with custom (bi’lma‘rūf). Lay injections on women kindly, for they are prisoners with you having no control of
their persons. You have taken them only as a trust from God, and you have made the enjoyment
of their persons lawful by the word of God, so understand and listen to my words, O people. I
have conveyed the Message, and have left you with something which, if you hold fast to it, you
will never go astray: that is, the Book of God and the sunnah of His Prophet. Listen to my words,
O people, for I have conveyed the Message and understand [it]. Know for certain that every
Muslim is a brother of another Muslim, and that all Muslims are brethren. It is not lawful for a
person [to take] from his brother except that which he has given him willingly, so do not wrong
yourselves. O God, have I not conveyed the message?" It was reported [to me] that the people
said, "O God, yes," and the Messenger of God said, "O God, bear witness."[13]
The sermon is also translated by Alfred Guillaume in The Life of Muhammad: A Translation of Isḥāq's Sīrat
Rasūl Allāh (1955), which is based on the work of Ibn Hisham.[14] Poonawala does not differ much with
Guillaume in regards to meaning, but notable differences are his translation of bi’l-ma‘rūf as "with custom"
and ‘awān as "domestic animals," whereas Guillaume translates the passage as, "If they refrain from these
things they have the right to their food and clothing with kindness. Lay injunctions on women kindly, for they
are prisoners with you having no control of their persons."
Ibn Ishaq also narrates the method in which the sermon was delivered:
Ibn Ḥumayd—Salamah—Muḥammad b. Isḥāq—Yaḥya b. ‘Abbād b. ‘Abdallāh b. al-Zubayr—
his father ‘Abbād: The man who used to repeat the Messenger of God's words loudly to the
people was when he was on ‘Arafah was Rabī‘ah b. Umayyah b. Khalaf. The Messenger of God
would say to him. "Say: O people, the Messenger of God says, do you know what month this
is?" and they would say, "The sacred month." Then he would say, "Say to them: God has made
your blood and your property sacrosanct until you meet your Lord, like the sanctity of this month
of yours." Then he said [to him], "Say: the Messenger of God says, O people, do you know what
land this is?" Rabī‘ah would call out loudly and they would say, "The Holy Land." He would
say, "Say: God has hallowed your blood and your property until you meet your Lord like the
sanctity of this land of yours." Then he said, "Say: O people, do you know what day this is?"
Rabī‘ah repeated [this] to them and they said, "The day of the Greater Pilgrimage." He said, "Say:
God has made your blood and your property sacrosanct until you meet your Lord like the sanctity
of this day of yours."[13]
Report by Al-Jahiz
Al-Jahiz in the Kitāb al-Bayān wa-al-Tabyīn presents the following text of the Farewell Sermon,[15] also
mentioned in Musnad of Imam Ahmad (hadith no.19774) as translated and annotated by Nuh Ha Mim
Keller:[16]
All praise is Allah’s. We praise Him, seek His help, ask His forgiveness, and we repent unto Him.
We seek refuge in Allah from the evils of our selves and our bad actions. Whomever Allah guides
none can lead astray, and whomever He leads astray has no one to guide him. I testify that there is
no god but Allah alone, without any partner, and I testify that Muhammad is his slave and
messenger. I enjoin you, O servants of Allah, to be godfearing towards Allah, I urge you to obey
Him, and I begin with that which is best.
To commence: O people, hear me well: I explain to you. For I do not know; I may well not meet
you again in this place where I now stand, after this year of mine.
O people: your lives and your property, until the very day you meet your Lord, are as inviolable
to each other as the inviolability of this day you are now in, and the month you are now in. Have I
given the message?—O Allah, be my witness. So let whoever has been given something for
safekeeping give it back to him who gave him it.
Truly, the usury of the Era of Ignorance has been laid aside forever, and the first usury I begin
with is that which is due to my father’s brother ‘Abbas ibn ‘Abd al-Muttalib. And truly the bloodvengeance of the Era of Ignorance has been laid aside forever, and the first blood-vengeance we
shall start with is that which is due for the blood of [my kinsman] ‘Amir ibn Rabi‘a ibn Harith ibn
‘Abd al-Muttalib. Truly, the hereditary distinctions that were pretensions to respect in the Era of
Ignorance have been laid aside forever, except for the custodianship of the Kaaba [by Bani ‘Abd
al-Dar] and the giving of drink to pilgrims [by al-‘Abbas].
A deliberate murder is subject to retaliation in kind. An accidental death from a deliberate injury
means a death resulting from [something not usually used or intended as a deadly weapon such
as] a stick or a rock, for which the indemnity is one hundred camels: whoever asks for more is a
person of the Era of Ignorance.
O people: the Devil has despaired of ever being worshipped in this land of yours, though he is
content to be obeyed in other works of yours, that you deem to be of little importance.
O people: postponing the inviolability of a sacred month [claiming to postpone the prohibition of
killing in it to a subsequent month, so as to continue warring despite the sacred month’s having
arrived] is a surfeit of unbelief, by which those who disbelieve are led astray, making it lawful one
year and unlawful in another, in order to match the number [of months] Allah has made
inviolable. Time has verily come full turn, to how it was the day Allah created the heavens and
the earth. Four months there are which are inviolable, three in a row and forth by itself: Dhul
Qa‘da, Dhul Hijja, and Muharram; and Rajab, which lies between Jumada and Sha‘ban. Have I
given the message?—O Allah, be my witness.
O people: verily you owe your women their rights, and they owe you yours. They may not lay
with another men in your beds, let anyone into your houses you do not want without your
permission, or commit indecency. If they do, Allah has given you leave to debar them, send them
from your beds, or [finally] strike them in a way that does no harm. But if they desist, and obey
you, then you must provide for them and clothe them fittingly. The women who live with you are
like captives, unable to manage for themselves: you took them as a trust from Allah, and enjoyed
their sex as lawful through a word [legal ruling] from Allah. So fear Allah in respect to women,
and concern yourselves with their welfare. Have I given the message?—O Allah, be my witness.
O people, believers are but brothers. No one may take his brother’s property without his full
consent. Have I given the message?—O Allah, be my witness. Never go back to being
unbelievers, smiting each other’s necks, for verily, I have left among you that which if you take it,
you will never stray after me: the Book of Allah. Have I given the message?—O Allah, be my
witness.
O people, your Lord is One, and your father is one: all of you are from Adam, and Adam was
from the ground. The noblest of you in Allah’s sight is the most godfearing: Arab has no merit
over non-Arab other than godfearingness. Have I given the message?—O Allah, be my witness.
—At this, they said yes.
He said, Then let whomever is present tell whomever is absent.
O people, Allah has apportioned to every deserving heir his share of the estate, and no deserving
heir may accept a special bequest, and no special bequest may exceed a third of the estate. A
child’s lineage is that of the [husband who owns the] bed, and adulterers shall be stoned. Whoever
claims to be the son of someone besides his father or a bondsman who claims to belong to other
than his masters shall bear the curse of Allah and the angels and all men: no deflecting of it or
ransom for it shall be accepted from him.
And peace be upon all of you, and the mercy of Allah.[16]
See also
Verse of Ikmal al-Din
Event of Ghadir Khumm
Farewell Pilgrimage
Muhammad in Islam
References
1. "IslamicFinder: Accurate Prayer Times, Athan (Azan), Mosques (Masjids), Islamic Center,
Muslim Owned Businesses, Hijri Calendar, Islamic Directory worldwide" (https://web.archive.or
g/web/20160309135655/http://www.islamicfinder.org/dateConversion.php?mode=hij-ger&day=
9&month=12&year=10&date_result=1). www.islamicfinder.org. Archived from the original (htt
p://www.islamicfinder.org/dateConversion.php?mode=hij-ger&day=9&month=12&year=10&dat
e_result=1) on 2016-03-09. Retrieved 2016-03-09.
2. "The Hadith of the Prophet Muhammad (‫ )ﺻﻠﻰ اﻟﻠﻪ ﻋﻠﻴﻪ و ﺳﻠﻢ‬at your fingertips" (http://www.sun
nah.com/bukhari/25/217).
3. "The Hadith of the Prophet Muhammad (‫ )ﺻﻠﻰ اﻟﻠﻪ ﻋﻠﻴﻪ و ﺳﻠﻢ‬at your fingertips" (http://www.sun
nah.com/bukhari/25/218).
4. "The Hadith of the Prophet Muhammad (‫ )ﺻﻠﻰ اﻟﻠﻪ ﻋﻠﻴﻪ و ﺳﻠﻢ‬at your fingertips" (http://www.sun
nah.com/bukhari/25/219).
5. "The Hadith of the Prophet Muhammad (‫ )ﺻﻠﻰ اﻟﻠﻪ ﻋﻠﻴﻪ و ﺳﻠﻢ‬at your fingertips" (http://www.sun
nah.com/muslim/15/159).
6. "The Hadith of the Prophet Muhammad (‫ )ﺻﻠﻰ اﻟﻠﻪ ﻋﻠﻴﻪ و ﺳﻠﻢ‬at your fingertips" (http://www.sun
nah.com/abudawud/23/9).
7. Brown, Jonathan A.C. (2011). "1. Life of the Messenger of God". Muhammad, A very short
introduction (https://www.google.com/books/edition/Muhammad_A_Very_Short_Introduction/9J
afXLrLiwYC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=farewell+sermon+muhammad+5:3&pg=PT64&printsec=frontc
over). Oxford University Press. Retrieved 17 April 2020.
8. Sahih Muslim, book 15 (The Book of Pilgrimage), hadith 159 (http://sunnah.com/muslim/15/15
9).
9. Sunan al-Tirmidhi, volume 1, book 7 (The Book on Suckling), hadith 1163 (https://sunnah.com/t
irmidhi/12/18)
10. Sunan ibn Majah, volume 3, book 9 (The Chapters on Marriage), hadith 1851 (https://sunnah.co
m/urn/1261680)
11. Ibn Hishām. ‫ اﻟﺴﻴﺮة اﻟﻨﺒﻮﻳﺔ‬/ as-Sīrah an-Nabawīyah (http://library.islamweb.net/newlibrary/displa
y_book.php?idfrom=1571&idto=1574&bk_no=58&ID=764). islamweb.net.
12. aṭ-Ṭabarī. ‫ ﺗﺎرﻳﺦ اﻟﻄﺒﺮي‬/ Tārīkh aṭ-Ṭabarī (http://library.islamweb.net/hadith/display_hbook.php?
bk_no=334&hid=838&pid=156687). islamweb.net.
13. Ismail K. Poonawala (1990). The History of al-Ṭabarī, Volume IX: The Last Years of the Prophet
(https://books.google.com/books?id=SWPQfmdf5J4C&pg=112). Albany: State University of
New York Press. pp. 112–114. ISBN 9780887066917.
14. Alfred Guillaume (1998) [First published 1955. Reissued in Pakistan 1967]. The Life of
Muhammad: A Translation of Isḥāq's Sīrat Rasūl Allāh. Karachi: Oxford University Press.
pp. 650–652. ISBN 9780196360331.
15. Al-Jāḥiẓ (1998). ‫ اﻟﺒﻴﺎن واﻟﺘﺒﻴﻴﻦ‬/ al-Bayān wa-al-tabyīn (in Arabic). Taḥqīq and sharḥ by ‘Abd asSalām Muḥammad Hārūn (7th ed.). al-Qāhirah: Maktabah al-Khānjī. pp. 31–33.
16. Nuh Ha Mim Keller (2001). "Adab of Islam" (http://www.masud.co.uk/ISLAM/nuh/adab_of_isla
m.htm). masud.co.uk.
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