Write the main adab e nabi in the light of surah hujurat?
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Answer:
Al-Ḥujurāt (Arabic: الحجرات, "The Chambers") is the 49th chapter (surah) of the Qur'an with 18 verses (āyāt). The chapter contains etiquette and norms to be observed in the Muslim community, including the proper conduct towards the Islamic prophet, Muhammad, an injunction against acting on news without verification, a call for peace and reconciliation, as well injunctions against defamation, suspicion, and backbiting. The chapter also declares a universal brotherhood among Muslims. The thirteenth verse, one of the most famous in the Quran, is understood by Muslim scholars to establish equality with regards to race and origin; only God can determine one's nobility based on his piety.
The chapter is a Medinan sura, revealed in the year 9 AH (630 CE) when the nascent Islamic state under the leadership of Muhammad had extended to most of Arabia. Muslim historians linked some of the verses (either verses 2–5 or just 4–5) to the conduct of a Banu Tamim delegation to Muhammad in Medina. The chapter reprimands the delegates' behavior and then lays down protocol when interacting with Muhammad.
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Answer: This is the etiquette that was taught to the people who sat among the audience of the Prophet
(peace be upon him) or came to visit him. Its intention was that the believers should treat the
Prophet (peace be upon him) with the highest respect and reverence when visiting him and talking
to him. Nobody should raise his voice louder than his. The people should not be unmindful of the
fact that they are addressing the Messenger (peace be upon him) of Allah, and not a common man or a person of equal rank. Therefore, there should be a marked difference between one’s tone of
conversation with the common people and one’s tone of conversation with the Prophet (peace be upon him), and no one should talk to him in a voice louder than his.
Explanation