Hadhrat Anas bin Nadhr
(Radhiyallaho anho) was one of the Sahabah who could not take part in the
campaign of Badr. He very much regretted to have missed the honour of
participating in the first and the most illustrious battle for Ham. He longed
for a chance wherein he could make amends for Badr. He did not have to wait for
long. The battle of Uhud came about in the following year. He joined the army
with the most determined zeal. Despite heavy odds, the Muslims were gaining the
upper hand, when some people made a blunder and the Muslims had to suffer a
reverse. The Prophet (Sallallaho alaihe wasallam) had posted a band of fifty
archers to guard a pass in the rear against the enemy cavalry. They had
definite instructions not to move from their position till further orders from
him. But when they saw the Muslims gaining victory and the enemy in full
flight, they left their position in the belief that the battle was over and it
was time to join in the pur-suit and get on to the booty. The leader of the
band tried his utmost to check them by reminding them of the Prophet's
(Sallallaho alaihe wasallam) command and sol-icited them to stay on, but no
more than ten persons would listen to him, arguing that the orders given by the
Prophet (Sallallaho alaihe wasallam) were only for the duration of the actual
fight. The enemy cavalry then noticed the un-guarded pass in the rear, made a
flank movement, forced a passage through it, and fell right on the rear of the
Mus-lims, who were pre-occupied with the booty. It was in this state of affairs
that Hadhrat Anas (Radhiyallaho anho) saw Hadhrat Sa'ad bin Ma'az (Radhiyallaho
anho) passing in front of him. He shouted to him:
"O, Sa'ad! where
are you going? By Allah! I smell the fragrance of Paradise coming from Mount
Uhud."
Saying this, he threw
himself into the very thick of the enemy, and fought tooth and nail till he met
his martyr-dom.
After the battle, it
was found that his body had been mauled and mutilated to such an extent that
only his sister could identify him, and that barely from the finger tips. No
less than eighty wounds of arrows and swords were counted on his body.
Those who strive in the
path of Allah with sincerity and devotion taste the pleasures of Paradise even
in this world, and so did Anas (Radhiyallaho anho) smell the fra-grance of
Paradise.
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