Please mention the name and address of the printer, publisher,  
bookseller, distributor and from where the Book-"Companions of the 
Prophet" Vol. 1 can be had, as well as, the e-mail address, if any  
of the author brother Abdul Wahid  Hamid. 
Abdul Wahid Osman Belal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


--- In islamcity@yahoogroups.com, muslimah muslimah wrote:
>
> rAbu Ubaydah ibn Al-Jarrah
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
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> Scanned from: Companions of The Prophet, Vol.1, By Abdul Wahid 
Hamid 
> --------------------------------------------------------------------
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> His appearance was striking. He was slim and tall. His face was 
bright and he had a sparse beard. It was pleasing to look at him and 
refreshing to meet him. He was extremely courteous and humble and 
quite shy. Yet in a tough situation he would become strikingly 
serious and alert, resembling the flashing blade of a sword in his 
severity and sharpness. 
> He was described as the "Amin" or Custodian of Muhammad's 
community. His full name was Aamir ibn Abdullah ibn al-Jarrah. He was 
known as Abu Ubaydah. Of him Abdullah ibn Umar, one of the companions 
of the Prophet, said: 
> "Three persons in the tribe of Quraysh were most prominent, had the 
best character and were the most modest. If they spoke to you, they 
would not deceive you and if you spoke to them, they would not accuse 
you of Iying: Abu Bakr as-Siddiq, Uthman ibn Affan and Abu Ubaydah 
ibn al-Jarrah." 
> Abu Ubaydah was one of the first persons to accept Islam. He became 
a Muslim one day after Abu Bakr. In fact, it was through Abu Bakr 
that he became a Muslim. Abu Bakr took him, Abdur Rahman ibn Auf, 
Uthman ibn Maz'un and al-Arqam ibn abi al Arqam to the Prophet, upon 
whom be peace, and together they declared their acceptance of the 
Truth. They were thus the first pillars on which the great edifice of 
Islam was built. 
> Abu Ubaydah lived through the harsh experience, which the Muslims 
went through in Makkah, from beginning to end. With the early 
Muslims, he endured the insults and the violence, the pain and the 
sorrow of that experience. In every trial and test he remained firm 
and constant in his belief in God and His prophet. One of the most 
harrowing experiences he had to go through, however, was at the 
battle of Badr.
>


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