Al-Sayyida Nafisa

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Al-Sayyida Nafisa
Shrine of al-Sayyida Nafisa, Cairo, Egypt
Shrine of al-Sayyida Nafisa, Cairo, Egypt
FatherAl-Hasan al-Anwar b. Zayd b. al-Hasan
BirthRabi' I 11, 145/June 9, 762
Place of BirthMecca
Place(s) of ResidenceMedina
Spouse(s)Ishaq b. Ja'far al-Sadiq (a)
ChildrenAl-Qasim and Umm Kulthum
DemiseRamadan, 208/January, 824
Place of BurialCairo
Age63


Al-Sayyida Nafīsa (Arabic: سيدة نفيسة) (b. 145/762 – d. 208/824)was the daughter of al-Hasan al-Anwar, the son of Zayd, son of Imam al-Hasan (a). She was buried in Cairo, Egypt. In historical books,she is well-known for her worship, asceticism, narrating hadith, generosity and memorizing Qur'an. She was married to Ishaq al-Mu'tamin, the son of Imam al-Sadiq (a). Al-Sayyida Nafisa mausoleum is among the most visited sites of Muslims, especially for the Egyptian Shi'a.

Biography

Al-Sayyida Nafisa was born on Rabi' I 11, 145/June 9, 762[1] in Mecca.[2] Hasan al-Anwar and Umm al-Walad were her parents. Al-Sayyida Nafisa was living with her father in Medina. Their house was on the west side of the city and opposite the house of Imam al-Sadiq (a).[3]


Marriage

Al-Sayyida Nafisa was married to Ishaq al-Mu'tamin, the son of Imam al-Sadiq (a).[4] It's said, first, her father didn't agree with their marriage, however after a dream at a night in which Prophet Muhammad (s) ordered him to agree with their marriage, he decided to accept the request[5].

Ishaq al-Mu'tamin was famous for being pious, knowledgeable and reliable in narrating hadith. He witnessed Imam al-Kazim's (a) last will to his son, Imam al-Rida (a). Abu Muhammad was the teknonym of Ishaq; because he was well-known for being trustworthy, he was called al-Mu'tamin. Ishaq was born and raised in Urayd (an area in Medina).[6] It's said al-Sayyida Nafisa and Ishaq al-Mu'tamin had two children named al-Qasim and Umm Kulthum.[7]

Immigration to Egypt

Al-Sayyida Nafisa moved to Egypt in 193 A.H/808-9. When people of Egypt heard of her arrival, they flocked to welcome her. It's said in Nasikh al-tawarikh: "She received great respect and high status while people asked her for blessing."[8]

For a while, al-Sayyida Nafisa and her father stayed in the house of Jamal al-Din b. 'Abd Allah b. Jassas, a businessman. After some time, they moved to the house of Umm Hani and then Abu al-Surayya Ayyub b. Sabir. The great number of people who came to visit al-Sayyida Nafisa made her feel that it may create some troubles for the owner of the house, so she decided to leave Egypt. However, people requested the governor of Egypt to prepare housing for her. Thus, he arranged to solve the problem by giving her a house in which she settled there forever.[9]

Immersed in Worship and Reciting Quran

Al-Sayyida Nafisa was highly attached to Quran.[10] According to most of the biographies, al-Sayyida Nafisa had memorized the holy Quran. Although some researchers mentioned her unfamiliarity with reading and writing[11], it's said she recited the whole Quran 1900 times[12]. It's also said she has passed away while reciting the verse:[13]

For them shall be the abode of peace near their Lord and he will be their guardian because of what they used to do. (Quran 6:127)

She has taken pilgrimage to Mecca thirty times[14]. She would shed tears in the fear of God.[15] It's also said that she has spent most of her nights in worship and fasted her days. Al-Sayyida Nafisa had dug a grave for herself with her own hands, and has prayed a great deal and recited the Quran many times there.[16]

Many biography and history writers that have penned about al-Sayyida Nafisa, mentioned her virtuousness, worship, knowledge and practicing God's orders. Here are some examples of the quotations:

  1. Yafai Yemeni described her as a virtuous woman who was gracious and respectable.
  2. Ibn Khallakan mentioned, al-Sayyida Nafisa was skilled in narrating hadith, and some of the great scholars have narrated hadith from her[17].
  3. Salih al-Wardani declared: al-Sayyida Nafisa shed tears in the fear of God; she memorized Quran and was familiar with Tafsir of Quran[18].

Students

According to the references, some of the great scientific figures have learned a great deal from al-Sayyida Nafisa including:

  1. Muhammad b. Idris al-Shafi'i turned to study jurisprudence in his thirties. When he moved to Egypt, on his way to al-Fustat mosque for teaching, he stopped to acquire hadith from al-Sayyida Nafisa[19].
  2. Ahmad b. Muhammad b. Hanbal b. Hilal known as Ahmad b. Hanbal attended the meetings of al-Sayyida Nafisa to acquire hadith[20].
  3. Dhul-Nun al-Misri.
  4. It's said Bushr b. Harith (al-Hafi) was so eager to learn from al-Sayyida Nafisa, that he sometimes stayed in her house on retreat (I'tikaf).

Her Extraordinary Acts

Biography resources and other different books have mentioned some extraordinary acts performed by al-Sayyida Nafisa[21], including curing the ill and saving Egyptians and the Neil River from drought[22].

Demise

Al-Sayyida Nafisa became ill in 208/824. On Ramadan/January her illness got worse. It's said she has passed away while reciting the holy Quran.[23]

During the time of her illness Ishaq al-Mu'tamin, her husband, was in Medina and he was informed by a letter. When he arrived there, al-Sayyida Nafisa has already passed away and the burial ceremony was going to start. Ishaq has intended to take her body to Medina, but Egyptians insisted on burying her there. They asked the governor to request Ishaq not to do so. Ishaq didn't accept it. They also collected a great deal of money and wealth to dissuade him. After Ishaq refused their request again, he had a dream in which Prophet Muhammad (s) told him "return their wealth and bury her near them."[24]

Shrine

Mausoleum of al-Sayyida Nafisa

Al-Sayyida Nafisa was buried in her house and now her tomb is there. Her husband wanted to take her body to Medina; but the Egyptians asked him to bury her in Egypt so that they can make tawassul.[25]

The shrine of al-Sayyida Khatun is among the most visited sites in Egypt. Today her Mausoleum is a place of pilgrimage for people, especially on Sundays and Thursdays. It is also a custom to hold wedding ceremonies near there. Each year on the birth anniversary of al-Sayyida Nafisa and Lady Zaynab (a) ceremonies are held in Egypt. The first ceremony was held in 889 A.H/1484-5 in the time of al-Ashraf Sayf al-Din Qa'ytabay; he was a Burji Mamluk Sultan of Egypt from 872 A.H/1467-8 to 901 A.H/1495-6. On these ceremonies, a large number of people gather around her burial site, and the celebration of different sects of Sunni and Shi'a Muslim continue to early morning. Requesting for blessing and circumambulating the bride in the shrine are the local costumes of Egyptians.[26]

In Qajar era, some Iranian Shi'a Muslims traveled to Syria and Egypt and visited al-Sayyida Nafisa mausoleum, in the time of Hajj. Some Iranian Hajj travel accounts gave reports and information on these travels, her mausoleum and Egyptians' beliefs about her.[27]

Ziyara

The ziyara of al-Sayyida Nafisa has been stated in biographical books. The spirituality and ancestral nobility of al-Sayyida Nafisa is highly admired, as a noble lady in Ahl al-Bayt (a) family.[28]

It's been narrated that in the past when people visited al-Sayyida Nafisa mausoleum, they read a ziyara which was written in Durar al-Asdaf. Here is a part of it:

Peace, salutation and reverence of Almighty and Beneficent God upon al-Sayyida Nafisa, the descendant of Prophet Muhammad (s), the mercy and guidance to all people … award us what we need in this world and in the Hereafter, O Lord of the worlds.[29]

See also

Notes

  1. ʿAṭārudī, Gawhar-i khāndān-i Imāmat, p. 7.
  2. Ziriklī, al-Aʿlām, vol. 8, p. 44.
  3. Gulī zawwārah, Bānū-yi kirāmat, p. 38.
  4. ʿAṭārudī, Gawhar-i khāndān-i Imāmat, p. 10; Abū Kaff, Āl Bayt al-Nabī fī Miṣr, p. 101, 102.
  5. Tawfīq, al-Sayyida Nafīsa, p. 95-96.
  6. Maḥallātī, Rayāḥīn al-Sharīʿa, vol. 5, p. 95.
  7. Ibn Ziyāt, al-Kawākib al-sayyāra, p. 34; Ṣabān, Isʿāf al-rāghibīn, p. 81.
  8. Sipihr, Nāsikh al-tawārīkh, vol. 3, p. 120; Maḥallātī, Rayāḥīn al-Sharīʿa, vol. 5, p. 88.
  9. ʿAṭārudī, Gawhar-i khāndān-i Imāmat, p. 13, 20-21; Abū Kaff, Āl Bayt al-Nabī fī Miṣr, p. 108.
  10. Sipihr, Nāsikh al-tawārīkh, vol. 3, p. 119.
  11. Ziriklī, al-Aʿlām, vol. 8, p. 44.
  12. Maḥallātī, Rayāḥīn al-Sharīʿa, vol. 5, p. 92.
  13. Ibn Ziyāt, al-Kawākib al-sayyāra, p. 34.
  14. Ziriklī, al-Aʿlām, vol. 8, p. 44.
  15. Gulī zawwārah, Bānū-yi kirāmat, p. 34.
  16. Ibn Ziyāt, al-Kawākib al-sayyāra, p. 31; Sipihr, Nāsikh al-tawārīkh, vol. 3, p. 126.
  17. Ibn Khallakān, Wafayāt al-aʿyān, vol. 5, p. 423-424.
  18. Wardānī, al-Shīʿa fī l-Miṣr, p. 109.
  19. Shablanjī, Nūr al-abṣār, p. 256.
  20. Abū Kaff, Āl Bayt al-Nabī fī Miṣr, p. 107.
  21. Shablanji, P.4
  22. Shablanji, P.254
  23. Gulī zawwārah, Bānū-yi kirāmat, p. 12.
  24. Shablanjī, Nūr al-abṣār, p. 258; Abū Kaff, Āl Bayt al-Nabī fī Miṣr, p. 104.
  25. Wardānī, al-Shīʿa fī Miṣr, p. 110.
  26. Wardānī, al-Shīʿa fī Miṣr, p. 110-113.
  27. See: Jaʿfarīyān, "Safarnāmah Ḥajj, p. 271.
  28. Shablanjī, Nūr al-abṣār, p. 259.
  29. Fuʾāz al-ʿĀmilī, al-Durr al-manthūr, p. 522.

References

  • Abū Kaff, Aḥmad. Āl Bayt al-Nabī fī Miṣr. Cairo: Dār al-Maʿārif, 1975.
  • ʿAṭārudī, ʿAzīz Allāh. Gawhar-i khāndān-i Imāmat. Tehran: Intishārāt-i ʿAṭārud, 1373 Sh.
  • Fuʾāz al-ʿĀmilī, Zaynab bt. ʿAlī. Al-Durr al-manthūr fī ṭabaqāt rabbāt al-khudūr. First edition. Egypt: al-Maṭbaʿa al-Kubrā al-Amīrīyya, 1312 AH.
  • Gulī zawwārah, Ghulāmriḍā. Bānū-yi kirāmat. Qom: Intishārāt-i Ḥasanayn, 1382 Sh.
  • Ibn Khallakān, Aḥmad b. Muḥammad. Wafayāt al-aʿyān. Edited by Iḥsān ʿAbbās. Beirut: Dār Ṣādir, n.d.
  • Jaʿfarīyān, Rasūl. Safarnāmah Ḥajj. Tehran: Nashr-i ʿIlm, 1389 Sh.
  • Maḥallātī, Dhabīḥ Allāh al-. Rayāḥīn al-Sharīʿa. Tehran: Dār al-Kutub al-Islāmīyya, n.d.
  • Ṣabān, Muḥammad. Isʿāf al-rāghibīn fī sīrat al-Muṣṭafā. Manuscript.
  • Shablanjī, Muʾmin b. Ḥasan al-. Nūr al-abṣār fī manāqib bint al-Nabī al-Mukhtār. Cairo: Manuscript, n.d.
  • Sipihr, ʿAbbāsqulī Khān. Nāsikh al-tawārīkh. Tehran: Islāmīyya, 1352 Sh.
  • Tawfīq, Abū ʿIlm. Al-Sayyida Nafīsa. Edited by Shawqī Muḥammad. Second edition. Tehran: al-Majmaʿ al-ʿĀlamī li-l-Taqrīb Bayn al-Madhāhib al-Islāmīyya, 2008.
  • Wardānī, Ṣāliḥ al-. Al-Shīʿa fī Miṣr. First edition. Cairo: Maktabat Madbūlī al-Ṣaghīr, 1414 AH.
  • Ziriklī, Khayr al-Dīn al-. Al-Aʿlām. Eighth edition. Beirut: Dār al-ʿIlm li-l-Malāyīn, 1989.