Allah, the Exalted, created His creatures and implemented
in them certain laws and habits. He also subjected these creatures to laws
and habits. For instance, a law that rules fire is incendiary; while plants
require certain spans of time and specific environments to grow and produce;
likewise, animals require specific conditions that vary according to their
sizes, types and colors, to grow.
Generally speaking, humans are subjected to assigned
universal laws and physiological, psychological and spiritual peculiarities;
yet, certain people who have been chosen by Allah and on account of His
far-reaching wisdom, have been excluded from these laws. In other words,
Allah subjected special laws to the chosen ones. Fire, for example, turns
everything in its way to ashes; yet Allah said to it:
"O fire! Be thou cool, and (a means of) safety
for Ibrahim."
When Yunis was "cast forth on the naked shore in a
state of sickness," after the whale swallowed him, Allah caused a "spreading
plant" to grow quickly and cover Yunis's sick body.
Procreation, too, cannot take place without impregnation
and the implementation of sperm in the woman's womb, wherein the sperm
is made into a clot that grows to be a fetus covered with bones that becomes
an unborn child. This process takes at least six to nine months; but his
natural process that Allah implemented in mankind was invalidated in the
case of Maryam (A) who gave birth to Isa (A) without any of these
steps. It has been said that she carried him six to nine hours in her womb
before giving birth to him under a palm tree in a secluded location.
Likewise, all miracles, which occurred through other
prophets, took place in environments that did not conform to natural laws.
The examples of such events are tremendous. The Holy Quran narrated many
stories about prophets' and Imams' challenges to the laws of nature. Among
these stories are Adam's descension from Paradise to Earth, the gushing
forth of the fountains of earth in the story of Noah, Sara's pregnancy
with Ishaq at an old age, the turning of Musa's stick into a snake, healing
the blind and the lepers and raising of the dead by Isa, and Ascension
into the Heavens by Allah's last Apostle (S)
Now that the above is understood, the following conclusion
can be derived:
Women's monthly menstruation, which starts at maturity
and continues until the fifties or sixties, is nothing but the discharge
of spoiled blood and tissues which were to hold the fetus had it been conceived.
Allah, the Almighty, says:
"They ask thee concerning women's menstruation.
Say: They are a discomfort and a pollution."
This indicates that the discharged blood is a harmful
substance, which would harm women if it stayed in their bodies. It is even
noticeable that women's psychological and physiological states, including
their facial appearance and everyday conduct change at this time of the
month. By this, we conclude that the bleeding which results from monthly
menstruation differs from the normal kind of bleeding, which any human
being-including women-might suffer.
It is unquestionable that monthly menstruation causes women to feel nervous, shy and dejected despite the fact that this occurrence is an involuntary natural course. Yet women suffer this course, which is unmentionable to anyone especially to men. For this reason, women are not obligated to perform prayers or fast during menstruation. They are also forbidden from staying in Mosques or to enter the Sacred Mosque in Mecca and the Prophet's Mosque in Medina. In addition, reciting the chapters of Qalam, Najm, Alif Lam Mim Tanzil, and Ha Mim as Sajdah are not to be read during women's monthly periods. These laws, which have just been mentioned, are also
valid during confinement in childbed.
Nevertheless, Allah, The Exalted, relieved Fatima
Zahra (A) from such pollution, as He removed from her all abomination and
purified her a total purification. This fact is authenticated by various
traditions among which are the following:
1. Qanduzi reported in Yanabi' al-Mawaddah p.260.
that the Prophet (S) said: "She was safeguarded from menstruation and
childbed (bleeding)."
2. Muhammad Salih al-Kashfi al-Hanafi reported in
Al-Manaqib that the Prophet (S) said: "Fatima was called Al-Batoul because
she was safeguarded and relieved from that which women encounter every
month (menstruation)."
3. A1-Amr-Tasri narrates in Arjah al-Matalib that
the Prophet (S) was asked about the meaning of Batoul-someone said to him:
"Messenger of Allah, we have heard you say that Maryam is Batoul and
Fatima, too, is Batoul!!"
The Prophet replied: "Batoul is she who never see
blood, meaning that she never discharges menstrual blood; because menstruation
is resented if it occurs in Prophet's daughters."
The above-mentioned narration was authenticated by
Al-Hakim.
4. A1-Hafez Abu Bakr Ash-Shafe'i narrates in Tarikh
Baghdad v.13, p.331, on the account of Ibn Abbass that the Prophet said:
"My
daughter is a human huri, she never menstruates, nor does she encounter
any menses."
Nisaee also narrates this tradition.
5. Ibn Asaker mentioned in At-Tarikh al-Kabir v.1, p.391, on the account of Anas Ibn Malik that Umme Salim said:
"Fatima (may Allah be pleased with her) has never
menstruated nor discharged childbed blood."
6. Al-Hafez al-Suyuti said:
'Among Fatima's particularities is that she did
not menstruate, and when she gave birth to a child, she would immediately
become purified from childbed confinement so as not to miss her prayers."
7. Rafae mentioned in At-Tadween that Umme Salama
said:
"Fatima never discharged blood during her childbed
confinement; nor does she menstruate."
8. Tabari narrates in Dhakhaer al-Uqbi that Asma Bint
Umais said:
"When Fatima gave birth to Al-Hassan, she did not
bleed; she also does not bleed during periods of menstruation. (When I
informed the Prophet of this) he said: `Do you not know that my daughter
is pure and chaste; she does not discharge blood as a result of childbirth
or menstruation."'
Safari narrates this tradition in Nuzhat al-Majalis
p.227.
9. It was mentioned in v.10 of Al-Bihar that Abu Basir quoted Imam Sadiq (A) as saying:
'Allah, the Exalted, forbade Ali (A) from marrying
women while Fatima was still alive."
Abu Basir exclaimed: "Why was that?"
The Imam replied: "Because she was pure and does
not menstruate."
Sheikh Majlisi commented on this narration by the following:
"This narration means either. First: Because Fatima
did not menstruate, Ali (A) had no reason to marry another woman. So Allah
forbade him to marry other women in observance of her sanctity. Or, Second:
Her eminence disallowed him from marrying another woman; where as this
particularity of hers is part of this eminence."
Fatima's exaltation from encountering menstrual or
childbed blood, confirms to the verse of purification which has already
been discussed.
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