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19. ABDULLAH IBN MAS‘ŪD (2) ASLI ‘Abdullah ibn Mas‘ūd r.a. participated in the hijrah (migration) of the Muslims, twice to Ḥabashah (Ethiopia) and once to Madinah to avoid the persecution of the Quraysh in Makkah. The first migration took place in the fifth year of the Prophet’s prophethood, consisting of about one hundred people, and was led by ‘Uthmān ibn ‘Affān and his wife Raqayyah (the Prophet’s daughter), Ja‘far ibn Abī Ṭālib, ‘Abd al-Raḥmān ibn ‘Awf, and Ummu Ḥabībah (the daughter of Abū Sufyān). They marched towards the Port of al-Shu‘aybah, then crossed the Red Sea. When they learned that the situation was getting better, they returned home. As the situation was not so good as had been expected, then the Muslims migrated again to Ḥabashah consisting of 83 men and 18 women, led by Ja‘far ibn Abī Ṭālib, taking a different route. They crossed the Red Sea from the Port of Jeddah heading towards Sawakin. The third migration was to Madinah which took place in 622 CE. ‘Abdullah ibn Mas‘ūd r.a. participated in the 29 military expeditions led by the Prophet. In the battle of Badr which took place in 2 AH as a share in the booty the Prophet gave him the sword of Abū Jahl. One of many reasons the Quraysh aristocrats refused to sit with the Prophet s.a.w. and listen to him was that his companions were weak people whom they considered belonging to the weak and ْ such as ‘Abdullah ibn Mas‘ūd, “the oppressed people )(المُسْ َتضْ َع ِفيْن, son of the mother of a slave”, Bilāl ibn Rabāḥ (d. 20/640) the Abyssinian slave of Umayyah ibn Khalaf (later freed bought and freed by Abū Bakr), Suhayb ibn Sinān (d. 39/659) the Roman, Khabbāb ibn al-Aratt (d. 37/657, and ‘Ammār ibn Yāssir (d. 37/657) the slave of Banī Makhzūm. There were many examples for these, such as: a. Mujāhid narrated that Bilāl and Ibn Mas‘ūd were with the Prophet s.a.w. and the Quraysh said that if it were not because of the presence of these two humiliated persons (Bilāl and Ibn Mas‘ūd), they would have sat with him. The Prophet s.a.w. would