Nusaibah bint Ka'ab
نُسَيْبَة بِنْت كَعْبShe arrived at Uḥud with a water skin to nurse the wounded. She left having shielded the Prophet ﷺ with her own body, sustained twelve wounds, and earned his du'ā for Jannah. This is her story — and it deserves to be told.
Who Was Nusaibah bint Ka'ab?
A woman history almost forgot — but Allah did not.
Nusaibah bint Ka'ab al-Māziniyyah — known by her kunya as Umm 'Ammārah — was one of the most extraordinary women in Islamic history. She was from the Banū Najjār tribe of the Ansār, the Muslims of Madinah who welcomed the Prophet ﷺ when he emigrated from Makkah. She was a wife, a mother, a nurse, a warrior, and a companion of the Prophet ﷺ — all woven into one remarkable life.
She was not born into nobility or rank. She was an ordinary woman of Madinah — the kind of person history tends to overlook. What made her unforgettable was a single defining quality: when the moment demanded everything, she gave it. When soldiers fled, she stood. When the Prophet ﷺ was surrounded, she put herself between him and the blade.
Her name, Nusaibah, is a diminutive of nasab — lineage, connection. And connection is precisely what defined her: to her faith, to her Prophet ﷺ, to her community, and to a courage that most people never find in a lifetime.
Sūrat Al-Aḥzāb — 33:35
"Indeed, the Muslim men and Muslim women, the believing men and believing women, the obedient men and obedient women..." — Allah named women explicitly in revelation. Nusaibah was among those He saw.
She was married first to Zayd ibn 'Āṣim, with whom she had two sons who would shape Islamic history: 'Abdullāh ibn Zayd — who received the vision of the adhān, the call to prayer — and Ḥabīb ibn Zayd, whose death would become one of the most painful chapters of her life. After Zayd, she married Ghaziyyah ibn 'Amr and had a daughter, Khawlah, also a companion of the Prophet ﷺ. An entire generation shaped by one woman's faith.
Early Life & The Second Pledge of Aqabah
She was present at the covenant that built the Muslim state. She was in the room — or rather, on the hillside — where history was made.
The Night That Changed Everything
In the year before the Hijrah, a group of Ansār climbed into the hills outside Makkah in the darkness of night to meet the Prophet ﷺ in secret. Seventy-two men and two women gathered to make the Second Pledge of Aqabah — the covenant that established the political and spiritual foundation of the Muslim community. They pledged their allegiance, their protection, and their lives.
Nusaibah was one of those two women. This was not a passive observation. It was a binding oath. She was not at the margins of this moment — she was part of it. Before Islam had a city, before it had an army, before it had a state — she had already committed herself to it completely.
What the Pledge Required
The pledge bound its makers to protect the Prophet ﷺ as they would protect their own families. It was, at its core, a promise of physical defence. Nusaibah made that promise. And then, at Uḥud, she kept it — with her body, with her blood, and with twelve wounds she bore home from the battlefield.
Her Home Was a Home of Faith
Faith in her household was not performance — it was the air the family breathed. Her husband, her sons, her daughter — all were companions of the Prophet ﷺ. That is not coincidence. That is the fruit of a woman whose conviction shaped everyone around her. Her son 'Abdullāh would receive the vision of the adhān. Her son Ḥabīb would die a martyr rather than renounce his faith. Children become what they are raised to be. She raised warriors of the spirit.
The Battle of Uḥud — The Day She Became a Legend
She came to give water. She stayed to give everything.
She Arrived to Nurse the Wounded
In the third year of Hijrah, the Muslim army marched out to meet the Quraysh at the mountain of Uḥud. Nusaibah came alongside her husband and two sons — not to fight, but to nurse. She carried a water skin, moving among the wounded on the edges of the battlefield. This was a honourable and vital role, one that many women fulfilled. She had no plan to fight. The battle had a different plan.
The Archers Disobey — Everything Collapses
The Prophet ﷺ had posted fifty archers on a hill with strict orders: do not leave your position, regardless of what happens below. When the Quraysh appeared to be retreating, most of the archers abandoned their post — certain the battle was won. Khalid ibn al-Walid (not yet Muslim) saw the opening and swept his cavalry around the hill, striking the Muslim forces from behind. What had been a victory became sudden chaos. Muslims scattered. The Prophet ﷺ was exposed and surrounded.
In this moment — when trained soldiers fled, when the formation collapsed, when the odds turned — Nusaibah set down her water skin and picked up a sword.
She Stood When Others Ran
The Prophet ﷺ described what he witnessed with his own words: "Wherever I turned — to my right or to my left — I saw Nusaibah bint Ka'ab fighting in my defence." She was not there by accident. She was not armed from the beginning. She took a weapon from a fallen fighter and placed herself between the Prophet ﷺ and those who came for him. Her husband fought alongside her. Her sons fought alongside her. They became a human shield around the most beloved man to have walked the earth.
She Personally Struck Ibn Qami'ah
The man who dealt the Prophet ﷺ his wound at Uḥud — Ibn Qami'ah — did not escape Nusaibah. She struck him with her sword. His armour absorbed the blow, but the blow landed. She also struck him with arrows. He did not reach the Prophet ﷺ uncontested — she made sure of that. He later boasted of wounding the Prophet ﷺ; it was Nusaibah who made him pay a price for getting close enough to do it.
Twelve Wounds
Before the battle ended, Nusaibah had sustained twelve wounds. Not one — twelve. Arrows, swords, spears. One wound to her shoulder was so severe it took a full year to heal. She did not leave the Prophet's ﷺ side. The Prophet ﷺ called to her son 'Abdullāh: "Your mother! Your mother! Bind her wound — may Allah bless you and your household, O Umm 'Ammārah. The station of your mother is greater than the station of such-and-such." He said this while watching her bleed. He named her. He honoured her. He compared her station favourably to those who had not shown the same courage.
She Asked for the Only Thing That Mattered
During a pause in the fighting, the Prophet ﷺ came to Nusaibah and said: "Allah has blessed you today, O Umm 'Ammārah." She looked at him — wounded, exhausted, still standing — and made one request. Not for wealth, not for status, not for recognition. She said: "Make du'ā to Allah that He grants us your companionship in Paradise."
He raised his hands and said: "O Allah, make them my companions in Paradise."
She said — and this is the line that stays: "After this, nothing of this world concerns me."
"Wherever I looked — to my right or to my left — I saw her fighting in front of me."
The Prophet Muhammad ﷺ — describing Nusaibah at UḥudOther Battles & Trials
Uḥud was not the only time she showed up. It was simply the most famous.
What the Prophet ﷺ Said About Her
To be praised by him was to be seen by heaven.
- ١ "Wherever I turned, I saw her fighting in my defence." Said after the Battle of Uḥud. He did not say this about any of the men who had trained for battle their entire lives. He said it about a woman who came to the battlefield with a water skin.
- ٢ "The station of Umm 'Ammārah today is greater than the station of so-and-so." He said this while her wound was being bound — comparing her standing explicitly to those who had not shown the same courage in that same battle.
- ٣ "O Allah, make them my companions in Paradise." Her request — and his response. She received a personal du'ā from the most beloved person to Allah, in a moment when du'ā are never turned away.
- ٤ He visited her personally while she recovered from her wounds. The leader of a community, the recipient of divine revelation, made time to sit with a wounded woman and honour what she had given.
- ٥ He visited her home after the Conquest of Makkah. Among all the things the Prophet ﷺ could have done upon returning triumphantly to the city of his birth, he made a point of visiting those who had given the most. She was on that list.
She was not celebrated in poems the way men who killed in battle were celebrated. She was not famous the way warriors were famous. But the Prophet ﷺ named her, visited her, made du'ā for her, and told the world what he saw when he looked. That is a different kind of fame — one that outlasts every other.
Her Legacy
She did not write books or build monuments. She built something harder — a life of complete integrity under pressure.
A Family of Companions
Her son 'Abdullāh ibn Zayd received the vision of the adhān — the call to prayer that has rung across the Muslim world five times a day for fourteen centuries. Every time the adhān sounds, there is an unbroken thread connecting it to the household of Nusaibah. Her son Ḥabīb died rather than deny his faith, his limbs taken from him one by one — a son she had raised to that particular, devastating kind of courage. Her daughter Khawlah was a companion too. An entire generation of witnesses, shaped by one woman's certainty.
She Transmitted Knowledge
Nusaibah was not only a warrior. She was a scholar of her circumstance — she narrated hadith from the Prophet ﷺ, and her narrations are preserved in the classical collections. She sat with him. She listened and remembered. She passed on what she learned. The sword and the knowledge were carried in the same hands.
She Asked the Question That Needed Asking
One of the most remarkable stories attributed to her: she came to the Prophet ﷺ and said — "Why does the Qur'an always speak about men? Why are women not mentioned?" Shortly after, verses were revealed that explicitly named believing men and believing women in equal terms. Whether or not this was the direct occasion of revelation is a matter of scholarly discussion — but the story captures something true about who she was: a woman who asked the question that needed asking, directly to the Prophet ﷺ himself, without apology.
Sūrat Al-Aḥzāb — 33:35
"Indeed, the Muslim men and Muslim women, the believing men and believing women..." — She asked. The answer came from above.
Fun Facts About Nusaibah bint Ka'ab
History has a habit of burying the astonishing in footnotes. Not today.
Nusaibah arrived at Uḥud intending to nurse the wounded. She picked up a sword when the battle turned. This makes her courage more remarkable — she had no prior intention to fight. The decision was made in real time, in real danger.
Ibn Qami'ah — who dealt the Prophet ﷺ his wound at Uḥud — was personally struck by Nusaibah in return. His armour absorbed the blow, but she landed it. He did not reach the Prophet ﷺ uncontested.
The call to prayer — which has summoned Muslims to worship for 1,400 years — came to her son 'Abdullāh in a dream. The Prophet ﷺ adopted it as the official call. Every adhān carries a thread back to her household.
She lost her hand in combat at the Battle of Yamāmah — and kept fighting. She was over fifty years old and sustained eleven wounds in that single battle. She had already survived twelve at Uḥud. Her total wounds across her lifetime exceeded twenty.
Of seventy-four people who made the covenant that established the political foundation of the Muslim state, only two were women. Nusaibah was one of them. She was present at the birth of the Islamic community.
Abu Bakr رضي الله عنه wrote to her personally, addressing her with honour and summoning her family to the Riddah wars. This was not a general call — he specifically sought her and her sons by name.
When the Prophet ﷺ made du'ā for her companionship in Paradise, she said those words and meant them. She had the thing that mattered. Everything else — the pain, the loss, the years still ahead — was secondary to that promise.
The shoulder wound she sustained shielding the Prophet ﷺ took twelve months to close. He personally asked about it throughout that year. In every narration we have, she never complained about it once.
The Fact That Should Trouble Us
Her name appears in almost no popular list of Islamic heroines. She is not on school curricula. She is not the subject of widely read biographies in English. She is known to scholars and to those who look deliberately. This is perhaps the most striking fact of all: that a woman who shielded the Prophet ﷺ with her own body, who bore more than twenty wounds across her lifetime, who raised the transmitter of the adhān and a son who died rather than deny his faith — this woman is barely known outside scholarly circles. She deserves more than a footnote. She deserves to be told.
Lessons from the Life of Nusaibah bint Ka'ab
History is not only for scholars. It is for everyone who needs to know what is possible.
- 01 Courage is a response, not a plan. She did not wake up on the morning of Uḥud intending to be a warrior. She responded to what the moment demanded. Real courage is rarely scheduled. It arrives uninvited and asks: what will you do now?
- 02 Your role can change — and that is allowed. She arrived to give water and left having fought. She did not refuse the second role because it was not in her plan. She adapted. Whoever needed her in that moment, she became that.
- 03 Grief does not have to defeat you — it can focus you. Her son Ḥabīb was murdered in the most brutal way imaginable. She turned that grief into a vow, then fulfilled the vow, then survived it. Grief given purpose is one of the most powerful forces in the world.
- 04 Ask Allah for what you actually want. She could have asked the Prophet ﷺ for anything in that moment. She asked for the biggest possible thing: his companionship in Jannah. She received a du'ā in return. Ask for what you really want. He already knows it. Say it anyway.
- 05 Women were never meant to be passive in this faith. She was at the covenant. She was at the battles. She narrated hadith. She questioned the Prophet ﷺ with a genuine inquiry. She raised warriors of the spirit. She was not a footnote. She was a foundation.
- 06 Obscurity in this world means nothing to Allah. She was barely known outside scholarly circles for fourteen centuries. But she was seen. By the Prophet ﷺ who praised her, by Allah who recorded every wound she bore, every step she took, every moment she chose to stay. Our obscurity in this world means nothing to the One who watches everything.
She did not need history to remember her. She was already known somewhere far more permanent than any book. But now that you have read this — you know her too. Say her name. Tell someone else. Women like Nusaibah were not meant to be forgotten.