Aisha's jealousy made her wish to be stung by a scorpion or a snake
The response
came in Fath Al-Bari with an explanation of Sahih Al-Bukhari
came in Fath Al-Bari with an explanation of Sahih Al-Bukhari
His saying ( Hafsa said )
meaning to Aisha.
His saying ( won’t you ride my camel tonight, etc.)
It is as if Aisha responded to that because she was eager to see what she was not seeing. This indicates that they were not close together while walking, but rather each one of them was on one side, as is the custom in walking, two trains. Otherwise, if they were together, neither of them would have been privileged to see what the other was not seeing. It is possible that she meant by looking the camel’s tread and the quality of its gait.
His saying ( when they dismounted, she put her feet between the idhkhir ) It is as if when she knew that she was the one who committed the crime in what Hafsa responded to, she reproached herself for that crime. The idhkhir is a well-known plant in which vermin are often found in the wild
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Here is a nice incident regarding the relationship between wives and their husbands. The narration from Al-Qasim from Aisha, may God be pleased with her, is that whenever the Prophet, may God bless him and grant him peace, went out, he would cast lots among his wives, and the lot fell to Aisha and Hafsa together. When it was night, he would walk with Aisha and talk, and Hafsa said: Will you not ride my camel tonight and I will ride your camel, so that you may watch and I may watch - that is, we will take turns testing this camel and I will test it - so she said: Yes, so I rode it, and the Prophet, may God bless him and grant him peace, came to Aisha’s camel with Hafsa on it, and he greeted her, then he walked until they stopped and Aisha missed him, and when they stopped, she put her feet between the idhkhir and said: O Lord, send a scorpion or a snake upon me to sting me, your messenger, and I cannot say anything to him! “…
That is, she expresses her regret in this matter. These are simple situations from the Prophet’s (PBUH) treatment of Aisha (may God be pleased with her), and Aisha’s good manners with the Chosen One (PBUH). All of this shows us what should be between a man and his wife, and what is related to some of the jurisprudential deductions from Aisha (may God be pleased with her) and the precision of her knowledge. It
is nothing but a declaration of jealousy because of the intense love that was between Lady Aisha (may God be pleased with her) and her husband, the Messenger of God (PBUH).
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