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Zaynab and had
He had four children with Fatimah, Hasan ibn Ali, Husayn ibn Ali, Zaynab bint Ali and Umm Kulthum bint Ali.
Following the Invasion of Afghanistan in October 2001, Maha, Abdulkareem, Maryam, Zaynab and her daughter Safia joined a convoy leaving Kabul traveling towards Gardez, but discovered that their intended residence had been bombed.
Only his sixth and seventh wives ( Umm Salamah and Zaynab, respectively ) were his direct cousins whom he had known since their childhood.
Zaynab had an aristocratic lineage, thus having a higher social status.
Zayd got tired of her and the bitterness had left him with no desire for her eventually leading to their divorce. Zaynab being Muhammad's first cousin was no stranger for him, he had seen her hundreds of time in his aunt Umaima bint Abdul Muttalib's house for over thirty years before she became Zayd's wife.
Zaynab bint Khuzayma, the previous wife of Muhammad who had died earlier, was her half-sister.
They had two sons, Qasim and Abd-Allah ( nicknamed al-Ṭāhir and al-Ṭayyib respectively ), both died young, and four daughters — Zaynab, Ruqaiya, Umm Kulthum and Fatimah.
In 1999, Zaynab was introduced to the Yemeni Yacoub al-Bahr, who had fought in Bosnia although better-known as a wedding singer in Kabul.
Zaynab offered the defence that she had purchased the computer second-hand seven months before her trip.

Zaynab and marry
In July 1995, Khadr arranged for his daughter Zaynab to marry an Egyptian man named Khalid Abdullah, " an Egyptian guest of the Taliban " from the Sudan, in December, and Maha began preparing an apartment for the couple in the family's house.
Watt however states that it is not clear why Zaynab was unwilling to marry Zayd as Zayd was held in a high place in Muhammad's esteem.
" Muhammad's decision to marry Zaynab was an attempt to break the hold of pre-Islamic ideas over men's conduct in society.
Initially, however, he was reluctant to marry Zaynab, fearing public opinion.
As was common among the Sanhaja tribes before extended military campaigns, Abu Bakr divorced Zaynab before he left, advising her to marry Yusuf if she needed protection.
In July 1995, Ahmed arranged for the 15-year old Zaynab to marry an Egyptian man named Khalid Abdullah in December, and Maha began preparing an apartment for the couple in the family's house.
When the Prophet Muhammad went to the house of Zaynab bint Jahsh to ask her hand for his adopted son, the family was shocked as they were excepting Muhammad to marry Zaynab bint Jahsh who also was his cousin, however the marriage took place but did not last long due to the lack of understanding between the couple and later Zayd divorced her.

Zaynab and Zaid
Sayyida Nafisa bint Hasan along with Sayyida Zaynab are traditionally considered the patron saints of the Cairo city. She is woman from Ahl al-Bayt family. She was the daughter of al-Hasan al-Anwar, the son of Zaid al-Ablaj, son of Imam Hasan, brother of Imam Husayn, son of the Daughter of the Prophet Sayyida Fatimat al-Zahra.

Zaynab and because
Zaynab disapproved of the marriage and her brothers rejected it, because according to Ibn Sa'd, she was of aristocratic lineage and Zayd was a former slave and the adopted son of Muhammad.
It was named " At-Tahrim ( Probihition, Harãm ) because in the sura, Allah advices to Muhammad not to stop eating his wive's Zaynab bint Jahsh honey because of what Hafsa have told him regarding his breath which Allah confirmed that is a lie.

Zaynab and slave
The marriage was a failure as Zaynab found it extremely difficult to accept a freed slave as her husband.

Zaynab and same
There is a different view, with many Sunnis holding her grave can be found within at a different mosque, also titled " Sayyidah Zaynab Mosque ", in Cairo. The Fatimid / Dawoodi Bohra also believe in same. Their 52nd Dai Mohammad Burhanuddin made zarih for the shrine, photo is place opposite.

Zaynab and from
The death of Zaynab coincided with that of Abu Salamah, a devout Muslim, as a result of his wounds from the Battle of Uhud.
Six months after the couple began living in a rented Tehran apartment, Abdullah phoned his father-in-law to report that Zaynab was inconsolable at being separated from her family, and the marriage was not working out.
After receiving written reassurance from Zaynab that she would not seek any form of restitution, he agreed to a formal divorce.
Ali also felt a great affection for his daughter and son-in-law and when he became caliph and moved the capital from Medina to Kufa, Zaynab and Abdullah joined him.
Some of the history related with Zaynab's last days are quoted here from news / web sources, which reveals that Zaynab died in Cairo and her shrine is also in Cairo:
Sayyida Ruqayya and Sayyida Nafisa along with Sayyida Zaynab are from Ahl al-Bayt and traditionally considered the patron saints of the Cairo city.
When Muhammad migrated from Mecca to Medina, his daughter Zaynab could not bear to leave her non-Muslim husband Abu al -' Aas, and was not required to do so until years later under other circumstances.
Examples are ( from as early as the 18th century ): Zaynab Begum, Begum Hazrat Mahal-who later divorced Nawab Wajid Ali Shah, Mughal princesses Jahanara Begum and Roshanara Begum, and Begum Inaara Aga Khan, Begum Nusrat Bhutto, Begum Khaleda Zia.

Zaynab and her
The prisoners were next sent to the court of Yazid, Umayyad caliph, in Damascus, where one of his Syrian followers asked for Husayn's daughter Faṭimah al-Kubra, and once again it was Zaynab who came to the rescue and protected her honour.
Maha barricaded the door, while the 15-year old Zaynab took her father's rifle and held it over her head screaming.
Since Zaynab was the wife of Muhammad's adopted son, pre-Islamic practices frowned upon such her marriage with the prophet.
As for Zaynab, however, she became ill and died eight months after her marriage.
During this skirmish, Medinan dissidents, begrudging Muhammad's influence, attempted to attack him in the more sensitive areas of his life, including his marriage to Zaynab bint Jahsh, and an incident in which Aisha left her camp to search her lost necklace, and returned with a Companion of Muhammad.
Zaynab told Zayd about this, and Zayd offered to divorce her, but Muhammad told him to keep her.
* Zaynab bint Ali married her cousin Abdullah ibn Ja ' far ibn Abi Talib, and bore four sons and a daughter:
In 2002, Zaynab took Abdulkareem to Lahore where her two-year old daughter needed medical attention.
The 12-year old Zaynab with her brother Abdulkareem in arms.
When police arrived to arrest her father on suspicion of involvement eight days later, Zaynab took her father's rifle and held it over her head screaming, while her mother barricaded the door.

Zaynab and brother
In October 2008, Zaynab began an 18-day hunger strike on Parliament Hill where she hoped to draw attention to the government's inaction on bringing her brother back to face trial in Canada.
Tradition says that Zaynab, already in anguish due to the death of her brother Husayn and her sons Aun and Muhammad, was forced to march unveiled.
Ubayd-Allah ibn Jahsh () was the brother of Zaynab bint Jahsh, Hammanah bint Jahsh and Abd-Allah ibn Jahsh.
He was the brother of Zaynab bint Jahsh, who married Muhammad.

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