Foster-mother and wetnurse of Muhammad
She nursed and raised the child who would become the Prophet Muhammad, a bond that gave her lasting reverence in Islamic tradition.
Halimah bint Abi Dhu'ayb al-Sa'diyya came from the tribe of Sa'd b. Bakr, itself part of the larger Hawazin confederation in the Arabian Peninsula. She and her husband took in the infant Muhammad as his foster-mother, a practice common among urban families who sent children to Bedouin clans for early upbringing. That relationship—caregiver to the man who would found Islam—secured her place in religious memory. The specifics of her life beyond that role remain sparse, but the foster-bond itself carries weight across centuries of Islamic scholarship and devotion.
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