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The man died, and Salman stayed in Amuria. One day, “Some
merchants from the tribe of Kalb passed by
me,” Salman said, “I told them, ‘Take me to Arabia and I will give you my cows
and the only sheep I have.’” They said, “Yes.” Salman gave them what he
offered, and they took him with them. When they reached Waadi al-Quraa [close
to Medinah], they sold him as a slave to a Jewish man. Salman stayed with the
Jew, and he saw the Palm trees [his previous companion had described].
“I hoped
that this would be the same place described by my companion.”
One day, a man who was a first cousin to Salman’s master
from the Jewish tribe of Bani Quraidha in Medinah came visiting. He bought
Salman from his Jewish master.
“He took me
with him to Medina. By God! When I saw it, I knew it was the place my
companion described.
Then God sent
His Messenger [i.e., Muhammad, may the mercy and blessings of God be upon him].
He stayed in Mecca as long as he did. I did not
hear anything about him because I was very busy with the work of slavery, and
then he migrated to Medina.
[One day,] I
was on a palm-tree on top of one of its date-clusters doing some work for my
master. A first cousin of his came and stood in front of him [his master was
sitting] and said, “Woe to Bani Qeelah [people of the tribe Qeelah], they are
gathered in Qibaa” around a
man who came today from Mecca claiming to be a Prophet!”
I trembled
so fiercely when I heard him that I feared that I would fall on my master. I
descended and said, ‘What are you saying!? What are you saying!?’
My master
became angry and punched me hard saying, “What business do you have in this [matter]?
Go and mind your business.”
I said, “Nothing!
I just wanted to be sure of what he was saying.”
On that
evening, I went to see the Messenger of God while he was in Qibaa. I took
something with me which I had saved. I went in and said, “I was told that you
are a righteous man and that your company [who] are strangers [here] are in
need. I want to offer you something I saved as charity. I found that you deserve
it more than anyone else.”
I offered it
to him; he said to his companions, “Eat,” but he himself kept his hand away
[i.e., did not eat]. I said to myself, “This is one [i.e., one of the signs of
his Prophethood].”
Following this encounter with the Prophet, may the mercy
and blessings of God be upon him, Salman left to prepare for another test! This
time he brought a gift to the Prophet in Medina.
“I saw that
you do not eat from that given as charity, so here is a gift with which I wish
to honor you.” The Prophet ate from it and ordered his companions to do the
same, which they did. I said to myself, “Now there are two [i.e., two of the
signs of Prophethood].”
On the third encounter, Salman came to Baqee-ul-Gharqad
[a grave yard in Medina] where the Prophet, may the mercy and blessings of God
be upon him, was attending the funeral of one of his companions. Salman said:
“I greeted
him [with the greeting of Islam: ‘Peace be upon you’], and then moved towards
his back attempting to see the seal [of Prophethood] which was described to me
by my companion. When he saw me [doing so], he knew that I was trying to
confirm something described to me. He took the garment off his back and I
looked at the seal. I recognized it. I fell down upon it, kissing it and
crying. The Messenger of God, may the mercy and blessings of God be upon him,
told me to move around [i.e., to talk to him]. I told him my story as I did
with you, Ibn ‘Abbaas [remember that Salman is telling his story to Ibn ‘Abbaas].
He [the Prophet] liked it so much he wanted me to tell my story to his companions.
He was still a slave owned by his master. The Prophet
said to him, “Make a contract [with your master] for your freedom, O Salman.” Salman
obeyed and made a contract [with his master] for his freedom. He reached an
agreement with his master in which he would pay him forty ounces of gold and
would plant and successfully raise three hundred new palm trees. The Prophet
then said to his companions, “Help your brother.”
They helped him with the trees and gathered for him the specified
quantity. The Prophet ordered Salman to dig the proper holes to plant the
saplings, and then he planted each one with his own hands. Salman said, “By
Him in Whose hands is my soul [i.e., God], not a single tree died.”
Salman gave the trees to his master. The Prophet gave
Salman a piece of gold that was the size of a chicken egg and said, “Take this,
O Salman, and pay [i.e., your master] what you owe.”
Salman said, “How much is this in regards to how much I
owe!”
The Prophet said, “Take it! God will [make it] equal to
what you owe.”
I took it and I weighed a part of it and it was forty
ounces. Salman gave the gold to his master. He fulfilled the agreement and he
was released.
From then on, Salman became one of the closest of companions
to the Prophet.
The Search for the Truth
One of the great companions of the Prophet by the name
of Abu Hurairah reported:
“We were sitting in the company of God’s Messenger
when Surah al-Jumuah (Surah 62) was revealed. He recited these words:
“And [God has sent Muhammad also to] others who have not yet joined
them (but they will come)…” (Quran 62:3)
A person amongst them said, ‘O God’s Messenger! Who
are those who have not joined us?’
God’s Messenger made no reply. Salman the Persian
was amongst us. The Messenger of God placed his hand on Salman and then said, ‘By
the One in Whose Hands is my soul, even if faith were near Pleiades (the seven
stars), men from amongst these [i.e. Salman’s folk] would surely attain it.” (At-Tirmidhi)
Many in this world are like Salman, searching for the
truth about the True and Only One God. This story of Salman is similar to
stories of people in our own time. The search of some people took them from
one church to another, from church to Buddhism or Passiveness, from Judaism to ‘Neutrality’,
from religion to meditations to mental abuse. There are those who shifted from
one idea to another, but don’t even think of wanting to know something about
Islam! When they met some Muslims, however, they opened their minds. The
story of Salman is that of a long search. You could make your search for truth
shorter by benefiting from his.
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