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O Level Islamiyat 2058
Paper 1 • First Islamic Community • Emigrants and Helpers

Muhajirun and Ansar رضي الله عنهم

Premium, fully structured Cambridge-style notes on the Emigrants and Helpers: their background, brotherhood, sacrifices, role in Madinah and importance for Muslims today.

This page combines syllabus coverage, chronological flow, beautiful visuals, key personalities, Qur’anic support, Hadith support, 10-mark plans and 4-mark evaluation frames.

Muhajirun + Ansar The two pillars of the first Madinan community
Emigrants
Helpers

Core Idea

  • The Muhajirun left Makkah for Allah and His Messenger ﷺ.
  • The Ansar welcomed, protected and supported them in Madinah.
  • The Prophet ﷺ united them through brotherhood.
  • Their unity helped build the first Islamic state/community.
  • Their lives teach sacrifice, hospitality, equality and unity.
Syllabus Focus

Why this topic matters in Cambridge Paper 1

This topic belongs to the Paper 1 area “The first Islamic community.” Students should know the main characters who lived with and near the Prophet ﷺ, including the Emigrants and Helpers, significant facts from their lives, and the importance of their actions in Islamic history and Muslim belief.

AO1

Define clearly

Know who the Muhajirun and Ansar were and why they were given these titles.

AO1

Give events

Explain Hijrah, arrival in Madinah, brotherhood and community building.

AO2

Show importance

Explain sacrifice, generosity, unity, equality, trust and social responsibility.

Exam Skill

Use examples

Use Abu Bakr, Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf, Sa‘d ibn al-Rabi‘ and Abu Ayyub رضي الله عنهم.

Quick Contrast

Muhajirun vs Ansar

Learn this comparison first. It gives students a clean foundation before studying the chronological events.

Muhajirun

المهاجرون • The Emigrants

  • Muslims who migrated from Makkah to Madinah for Islam.
  • They left homes, wealth, families and security.
  • Their sacrifice showed that faith was more important than worldly comfort.
  • Many had suffered persecution in Makkah.
  • Important examples include Abu Bakr, Umar, Uthman, Ali, Bilal, Umm Salamah and Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf رضي الله عنهم.

Ansar

الأنصار • The Helpers

  • Muslims of Madinah who welcomed and helped the migrants.
  • They belonged mainly to the Aws and Khazraj tribes.
  • They gave homes, wealth, protection and brotherhood.
  • Their support made Madinah the centre of Islam.
  • Important examples include Sa‘d ibn al-Rabi‘, Sa‘d ibn Mu‘adh, Abu Ayyub al-Ansari and Usayd ibn Hudayr رضي الله عنهم.
Chronological Structure

From Makkah’s Persecution to Madinah’s Brotherhood

For the best exam answers, present the topic in order: why migration became necessary, how Madinah prepared, how the Prophet ﷺ arrived, and how brotherhood created a new community.

🔥

Persecution

Muslims suffered pressure, boycott and danger in Makkah.

🤝

Aqabah

People of Yathrib accepted Islam and pledged support.

🌙

Hijrah

Muhajirun migrated for Allah and His Messenger ﷺ.

🏡

Welcome

Ansar received the Prophet ﷺ and the migrants with love.

🕌

Community

Masjid, brotherhood and constitution organised society.

🛡️

Defence

Together they defended Islam and built the first Muslim community.

Foundation

1. Who were the Muhajirun?

Definition and background

  • Muhajirun means the Emigrants.
  • They were the Muslims who migrated from Makkah to Madinah for the sake of Allah and His Messenger ﷺ.
  • They left homes, businesses, tribal protection, relatives and property.
  • Some had already suffered persecution, torture, social boycott or loss of status in Makkah.
  • Their migration was not for wealth or comfort; it was a religious migration to preserve faith and help establish Islam.

Qualities shown by the Muhajirun

  • Sacrifice: they gave up worldly security for Islam.
  • Trust: they relied on Allah during uncertainty.
  • Courage: they faced danger during and after migration.
  • Obedience: they followed the Prophet’s ﷺ guidance.
  • Resilience: they rebuilt life in Madinah with dignity and hard work.

Qur’anic meaning guide

Qur’an 9:100 honours the earliest Muhajirun and Ansar, and those who follow them in goodness. This makes the two groups central examples for Muslims.

Foundation

2. Who were the Ansar?

Definition and background

  • Ansar means the Helpers or Supporters.
  • They were the Muslims of Madinah who supported the Prophet ﷺ and the Muhajirun.
  • They belonged mainly to the tribes of Aws and Khazraj.
  • Before Islam, these tribes had experienced conflict and rivalry.
  • Islam united them and gave Madinah a new moral and religious direction.

Qualities shown by the Ansar

  • Hospitality: they opened their homes to migrants.
  • Selflessness: they gave preference to others even when they had need.
  • Protection: they accepted the duty to defend the Prophet ﷺ.
  • Brotherhood: they treated the Muhajirun as true brothers.
  • Unity: they helped transform Yathrib into Madinah, the centre of Islam.

Qur’anic meaning guide

Qur’an 59:9 praises the people of Madinah who loved the migrants and gave them preference over themselves even when they were in need. This is one of the strongest evidences for the character of the Ansar.

Before Hijrah

3. How Madinah became ready: Yathrib, Aqabah and the Ansar

Chronological explanation

  • Before the Hijrah, Madinah was known as Yathrib.
  • The city had important Arab tribes, especially Aws and Khazraj, and Jewish tribes living nearby.
  • Some people from Yathrib met the Prophet ﷺ during the pilgrimage season in Makkah.
  • They accepted Islam and took the message back to Yathrib.
  • The First and Second Pledges of Aqabah prepared the way for the Prophet’s ﷺ migration.
  • In these pledges, people from Yathrib accepted Islam, promised loyalty and agreed to support/protect the Prophet ﷺ.
  • This meant Madinah was not an accidental refuge; it was spiritually and socially prepared to become the new centre of Islam.

Why the Ansar were crucial before Hijrah

  • They accepted the message before the Prophet ﷺ arrived.
  • They invited him to their city.
  • They offered protection at a time when Makkah had become dangerous.
  • They created the conditions for Islam to move from a persecuted group to an organised community.

Exam development point

  • Do not start the topic only from the arrival in Madinah.
  • For a strong answer, mention the Aqabah pledges because they show that the Ansar had already accepted responsibility.
  • This makes the role of the Ansar more than hospitality; it was a serious covenant of faith and protection.
Hijrah

4. The Muhajirun’s sacrifice during migration

What they sacrificed

  • They left behind houses and trade in Makkah.
  • They were separated from relatives and familiar tribal networks.
  • They risked being chased, stopped, attacked or robbed.
  • Some migrated secretly because Makkans opposed the movement.
  • They arrived in Madinah needing housing, work, food and social support.

Why this mattered

  • Their migration proved sincerity of faith.
  • It separated Islam from tribal dependence on Makkah.
  • It allowed Muslims to worship and organise society freely.
  • It helped create the first Muslim community under the Prophet’s ﷺ leadership.
  • It became a turning point in Islamic history and later the basis for the Islamic calendar.

Common mistake

  • Do not write that the Muhajirun migrated because they “wanted a better life.”
  • Write that they migrated for faith, safety, obedience to the Prophet ﷺ and the establishment of Islam.
Arrival

5. How the Ansar welcomed the Prophet ﷺ and the Muhajirun

The welcome

  • The Ansar received the Prophet ﷺ with joy and honour.
  • Many people wished to host him.
  • The Prophet ﷺ stayed at the house of Abu Ayyub al-Ansari رضي الله عنه in the early days.
  • This welcome showed love for the Prophet ﷺ and readiness to serve Islam.
  • The arrival changed Yathrib into Madinat al-Nabi, the city of the Prophet ﷺ.

How they helped the migrants

  • They shared homes and resources.
  • They helped the Muhajirun settle into a new city.
  • They provided social protection in a society where tribal support mattered.
  • They helped build the mosque and the new community.
  • They became partners in the Prophet’s ﷺ mission, not just hosts.
Brotherhood

6. Mu’akhah: the Brotherhood between Muhajirun and Ansar

What the Prophet ﷺ did

  • After arriving in Madinah, the Prophet ﷺ established brotherhood between the Muhajirun and Ansar.
  • This brotherhood is known as Mu’akhah.
  • It paired migrants with local Muslims so that the migrants would not remain isolated or helpless.
  • It replaced tribal selfishness with faith-based brotherhood.
  • It helped solve immediate problems of housing, food, work and emotional support.

Example: Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf and Sa‘d ibn al-Rabi‘ رضي الله عنهما

  • The Prophet ﷺ paired Abd al-Rahman, a Muhajir, with Sa‘d, an Ansari.
  • Sa‘d offered generous support from his wealth.
  • Abd al-Rahman thanked him and asked to be shown the market.
  • This shows two virtues together: Ansari generosity and Muhajir self-respect.
  • It is one of the best examples for a Cambridge answer.

Why brotherhood was brilliant social policy

  • It prevented poverty and resentment.
  • It integrated migrants into the city.
  • It created equality between different tribes and backgrounds.
  • It built trust before later tests such as Badr, Uhud and the Trench.
  • It made Islam a living community, not only a belief system.

Hadith support

Sahih al-Bukhari records the brotherhood of Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf and Sa‘d ibn al-Rabi‘ رضي الله عنهما, showing Sa‘d’s generosity and Abd al-Rahman’s self-reliance.

Community Building

7. Their role in building the first Islamic community in Madinah

Area Role of Muhajirun Role of Ansar Exam Significance
Masjid al-Nabawi Joined the Prophet ﷺ in establishing the religious centre. Helped provide space, labour and local support. The mosque became the centre of worship, teaching and consultation.
Brotherhood Accepted new brothers and rebuilt life with dignity. Shared homes, wealth and protection. Shows practical Islamic unity beyond tribe and race.
Economy Worked, traded and became self-reliant. Helped the migrants settle and access livelihood. Shows balance between charity and hard work.
Defence Fought and defended Islam after years of persecution. Protected the Prophet ﷺ as promised at Aqabah. Shows courage, loyalty and fulfilment of pledge.
Unity Brought Makkan experience and early faith. Brought local support and political strength. Together they created the first Islamic community.
Later Tests

8. Muhajirun and Ansar in battles and public life

Badr, Uhud and Trench

  • After Hijrah, the Muslims faced military pressure from the Makkans and other opponents.
  • At Badr, Muhajirun and Ansar fought together as one community.
  • At Uhud, their unity was tested through hardship and loss.
  • At the Trench, Madinah itself was defended through collective planning and sacrifice.
  • These battles show that brotherhood was not theoretical; it was tested in danger.

Political and social life

  • They supported the Prophet ﷺ in consultation and decision-making.
  • They helped implement the Constitution of Madinah.
  • They created a model of faith-based citizenship and social responsibility.
  • The Ansar gave local strength while the Muhajirun brought early experience of struggle.
  • Together they helped Islam become a complete community system.

A* development point

  • Do not present the Muhajirun and Ansar as two separate groups only.
  • The real importance is that Islam joined them into one Ummah under the Prophet ﷺ.
  • This is why their story is a model for Muslim unity today.
Key People

Important Examples for Exam Answers

Learn these examples carefully. They allow students to write developed answers instead of giving vague general statements.

Muhajir • Companion of Hijrah

Abu Bakr al-Siddiq رضي الله عنه

Key Facts

  • One of the earliest Muslims and the closest Companion of the Prophet ﷺ.
  • Left Makkah with the Prophet ﷺ during the Hijrah.
  • Stayed with the Prophet ﷺ in the Cave of Thawr.
  • Spent wealth for Islam and supported vulnerable Muslims.
  • His migration shows complete loyalty, trust and sacrifice.

Importance / Exam Value

  • Best example for loyalty of the Muhajirun.
  • Useful for Hijrah, Cave of Thawr, sacrifice and leadership questions.
  • Connects Muhajirun with later Rightly Guided Caliphate.
Muhajir • Courage and strength

Umar ibn al-Khattab رضي الله عنه

Key Facts

  • Accepted Islam in Makkah and strengthened the Muslims.
  • Migrated from Makkah to Madinah as part of the Muhajirun.
  • Known for courage, firmness, justice and open support for Islam.
  • Became a major adviser of the Prophet ﷺ in Madinah.
  • Later became the second Rightly Guided Caliph.

Importance / Exam Value

  • Useful for courage and public strength of the Muslims.
  • Shows that Hijrah was not escape from faith but movement for faith.
  • Good example for leadership and justice.
Muhajir • Double migration

Uthman ibn Affan رضي الله عنه

Key Facts

  • One of the early Muslims and husband of two daughters of the Prophet ﷺ at different times.
  • Migrated to Abyssinia and later to Madinah.
  • Known for modesty, generosity and sacrifice.
  • Helped the Muslim community with wealth.
  • Later became the third Rightly Guided Caliph.

Importance / Exam Value

  • Shows willingness to leave home more than once for Islam.
  • Useful for migration, sacrifice, generosity and Qur’an standardisation links.
  • Strong example of wealthy Muslim serving the community.
Muhajir • Courage and family

Ali ibn Abi Talib رضي الله عنه

Key Facts

  • Cousin of the Prophet ﷺ and one of the earliest believers.
  • Slept in the Prophet’s ﷺ bed on the night of Hijrah to protect his departure.
  • Returned trusts to their owners before migrating.
  • Married Fatimah رضي الله عنها in Madinah.
  • Later became the fourth Rightly Guided Caliph.

Importance / Exam Value

  • Excellent example for bravery and trustworthiness.
  • Shows that the Hijrah involved planning, courage and responsibility.
  • Connects Muhajirun with Ahl al-Bayt and the Prophet’s ﷺ family.
Muhajir • Self-reliance

Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf رضي الله عنه

Key Facts

  • A wealthy Makkan Muslim who migrated and lost much of his earlier comfort.
  • The Prophet ﷺ paired him with Sa‘d ibn al-Rabi‘ رضي الله عنه.
  • Sa‘d offered him support, but Abd al-Rahman asked to be shown the market.
  • He worked, traded and rebuilt his livelihood in Madinah.
  • He later became known for generosity and support for Islam.

Importance / Exam Value

  • Best example for brotherhood plus dignity and hard work.
  • Shows that Muhajirun were not lazy dependents.
  • Useful for economic rebuilding after Hijrah.
Muhajir • Patience under persecution

Bilal ibn Rabah رضي الله عنه

Key Facts

  • An early Muslim who suffered severe persecution in Makkah.
  • Freed through Abu Bakr’s رضي الله عنه support.
  • Migrated and became part of the Madinan Muslim community.
  • Chosen as the first mu’adhdhin in Madinah.
  • His life shows patience, dignity and equality in Islam.

Importance / Exam Value

  • Strong example for persecution before Hijrah.
  • Shows how Madinah gave dignity to oppressed Muslims.
  • Useful for equality, worship and first community questions.
Ansari • Generosity

Sa‘d ibn al-Rabi‘ رضي الله عنه

Key Facts

  • An Ansari Companion from Madinah.
  • Paired with Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf رضي الله عنه in brotherhood.
  • Offered generous support from his wealth.
  • Represents the open-hearted welcome of the Ansar.
  • His example is one of the clearest practical illustrations of brotherhood.

Importance / Exam Value

  • Best Ansari example for generosity.
  • Useful for Qur’an 59:9 and selflessness of the Ansar.
  • Shows why the Ansar are praised in Islamic sources.
Ansari leader • Aws

Sa‘d ibn Mu‘adh رضي الله عنه

Key Facts

  • A leading figure of the Aws in Madinah.
  • Accepted Islam and influenced many of his people.
  • Supported the Prophet ﷺ and the Muslim community strongly.
  • Important in Madinah’s political and military life.
  • Represents the leadership role of the Ansar.

Importance / Exam Value

  • Useful for Ansari leadership in Madinah.
  • Shows that the Ansar were not only hosts but protectors and leaders.
  • Good example for community-building answers.
Ansari leader • Aws

Usayd ibn Hudayr رضي الله عنه

Key Facts

  • A respected leader among the Aws.
  • Accepted Islam after hearing the message brought to Madinah.
  • His acceptance helped spread Islam among his people.
  • Known for commitment and service.
  • Represents the early spread of Islam in Yathrib before Hijrah.

Importance / Exam Value

  • Useful for the pre-Hijrah preparation of Madinah.
  • Shows how the Ansar became ready to receive the Prophet ﷺ.
  • Good supporting example in detailed answers.
Ansari host • Madinah welcome

Abu Ayyub al-Ansari رضي الله عنه

Key Facts

  • The Prophet ﷺ stayed at his house after arriving in Madinah.
  • His home became a place of honour in the early days after Hijrah.
  • He represents the hospitality and love of the Ansar.
  • His example shows how the people of Madinah received the Prophet ﷺ.
  • He remained known for devotion and service.

Importance / Exam Value

  • Excellent example for the welcome in Madinah.
  • Useful for arrival, hospitality and status of Ansar.
  • Helps students write vivid details in 10-mark answers.
Importance Today

9. Lessons Muslims learn from Muhajirun and Ansar

Lesson Muhajirun Example Ansar Example Modern Muslim Application
Sacrifice Leaving Makkah for faith. Sharing resources with migrants. Putting religion and moral duty above selfish comfort.
Brotherhood Accepting a new community in Madinah. Treating migrants as brothers. Helping refugees, newcomers, poor Muslims and neighbours.
Self-reliance Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf asking for the market. Giving support without humiliation. Combining welfare with dignity and hard work.
Unity Makkan migrants joining a new society. Aws and Khazraj uniting under Islam. Overcoming class, ethnicity, language and sectarian divisions.
Leadership Senior Muhajirun advised and served the Prophet ﷺ. Ansari leaders protected Madinah. Religious communities need consultation, service and responsible leadership.
Exam Balance

10. Common misunderstandings and corrections

Mistakes to avoid

  • Writing that Muhajirun were only “poor refugees”.
  • Writing that Ansar were only “kind hosts”.
  • Forgetting the Aqabah pledges before the Hijrah.
  • Not mentioning brotherhood in Madinah.
  • Writing general praise without examples.
  • Ignoring the Qur’anic praise of both groups.

Correct approach

  • Define both groups clearly.
  • Explain the chronological story from Makkah to Madinah.
  • Use examples: Abu Bakr, Abd al-Rahman, Sa‘d ibn al-Rabi‘ and Abu Ayyub رضي الله عنهم.
  • Link the topic with Hijrah, mosque, brotherhood and first Islamic community.
  • For part (b), explain lessons for Muslims today.
Exam Training

Cambridge-Style Answer Frames

These frameworks help students write clear, developed answers. Learn the bullet plan first, then turn it into paragraphs.

10-mark Part (a) Knowledge Answer

Question: Write about the Muhajirun and Ansar and their role in the first Islamic community.

  • Define the Muhajirun as the Muslims who migrated from Makkah to Madinah for Islam.
  • Explain that they left homes, wealth, family protection and business because faith was more important than worldly comfort.
  • Give examples such as Abu Bakr, Umar, Uthman, Ali, Bilal and Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf رضي الله عنهم.
  • Define the Ansar as the Muslims of Madinah who welcomed and helped the Prophet ﷺ and the migrants.
  • Mention that they mainly came from the Aws and Khazraj tribes.
  • Explain the Aqabah pledges, where people of Yathrib promised faith, loyalty and support.
  • Describe the welcome in Madinah and the Prophet’s ﷺ stay with Abu Ayyub al-Ansari رضي الله عنه.
  • Explain Mu’akhah: the Prophet ﷺ created brotherhood between Muhajirun and Ansar.
  • Use the example of Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf and Sa‘d ibn al-Rabi‘ رضي الله عنهما to show generosity and self-reliance.
  • Conclude that together they built, protected and strengthened the first Islamic community in Madinah.
4-mark Part (b) Evaluation Answer

Question: Why are the Muhajirun and Ansar important examples for Muslims today?

  • They are important because the Muhajirun show sacrifice for faith and obedience to Allah and His Messenger ﷺ.
  • The Ansar show hospitality, generosity and selflessness towards those in need.
  • The brotherhood between the two groups teaches Muslims to overcome tribal, racial and social divisions.
  • The example of Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf رضي الله عنه teaches dignity and hard work, while Sa‘d ibn al-Rabi‘ رضي الله عنه teaches generosity.
  • Their unity reminds Muslims that a strong community is built through faith, service, trust and shared responsibility.
A* Sentence Starters

Useful phrases for high-level answers

  • “The Muhajirun are significant because their migration showed that faith was more valuable than home, wealth and tribal security…”
  • “The Ansar were not only hosts; they became protectors and partners in the Prophet’s ﷺ mission…”
  • “The brotherhood in Madinah transformed separate groups into one faith-based Ummah…”
  • “The example of Sa‘d ibn al-Rabi‘ and Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf رضي الله عنهما shows both generosity and self-reliance…”
  • “For Muslims today, this topic gives a model for refugee support, community welfare and unity beyond ethnicity…”

Likely Past-Paper Style Question Angles

These are Cambridge-style revision angles for topical practice. Use your topical past-paper pages for exact year-by-year questions.

Angle 1: Direct group question

Write about the Muhajirun and Ansar and their role in the early Muslim community.

Angle 2: Brotherhood

Describe the brotherhood established by the Prophet ﷺ between the Muhajirun and Ansar.

Angle 3: Importance of Ansar

Explain why the Ansar were important in the development of Islam in Madinah.

Angle 4: Sacrifice of Muhajirun

What sacrifices did the Muhajirun make for Islam?

Angle 5: Community lessons

What lessons can Muslims today learn from the Muhajirun and Ansar?

Angle 6: Hijrah to community

How did the Hijrah lead to the creation of the first Islamic community?

Mark Scheme Focus

What Full-Mark Answers Usually Do

For 10-mark answers

  • Define Muhajirun and Ansar accurately.
  • Explain the events in chronological order.
  • Mention the Aqabah pledges, Hijrah, arrival, mosque and brotherhood.
  • Use named examples instead of vague general praise.
  • Explain how both groups helped build the Madinan community.

For 4-mark answers

  • Explain importance, not just history.
  • Connect lessons with Muslims today: sacrifice, charity, refugee support, unity and brotherhood.
  • Use “this teaches Muslims…” and “this is important because…”
  • Give two developed reasons rather than four weak one-line points.
  • Show present-day relevance clearly.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Not knowing the difference between Muhajirun and Ansar.
  • Ignoring the role of the Aqabah pledges.
  • Forgetting the example of Abd al-Rahman ibn Awf and Sa‘d ibn al-Rabi‘ رضي الله عنهما.
  • Writing only emotional praise without historical details.
  • Not linking the topic with the first Islamic community.
  • Failing to explain why the topic matters for Muslims today.

Return to Paper 1

Go back to the main Paper 1 page for the full topic map, Qur’anic passages, Seerah notes, Madinan community topics and topical past-paper links.

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