بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ
وَلَا يَغْتَب بَّعْضُكُم بَعْضًا ۚ
أَيُحِبُّ أَحَدُكُمْ أَن يَأْكُلَ لَحْمَ أَخِيهِ مَيْتًا فَكَرِهْتُمُوهُ
“And do not backbite one another.
Would one of you like to eat the flesh of his dead brother? You would despise it.”
Sūrat al-Ḥujurāt 49:12
It is reported from the Messenger of Allah ﷺ:
الْمَجَالِسُ بِالأَمَانَةِ
Al-majālisu bil-amānah.
“Gatherings are a trust.”
These few words should be written on the door of every home. And every office. And every school. And every community room. And every WhatsApp group where people think the unseen angels have left because the conversation has become informal.
They have not left.
Allah says:
مَّا يَلْفِظُ مِن قَوْلٍ إِلَّا لَدَيْهِ رَقِيبٌ عَتِيدٌ
“Not a word does a person utter except that there is a watcher ready.”
That is the first correction.
A meeting is not only attended by the people in the room. It is attended by Allah’s knowledge. It is attended by angels. It is attended by the account that will return to us on a Day when every sentence will have weight.
The Betrayal After the Meeting
There is a strange thing that happens after gatherings.
People sit together. They discuss something difficult.
A family matter. A school matter. A workplace matter. A community matter. A matter of children. A matter of marriage. A matter of money. A matter of leadership. A matter of hurt.
Inside the room, there is tone. There is hesitation. There are pauses. There is sadness. There is the look on someone’s face when they say, “I may be wrong, but…” There is the softness with which a concern is raised. There is the apology before the criticism. There is the love behind the correction. There is the pain behind the firmness. Then someone leaves the room.
And the words travel. But the tone does not travel. The context does not travel. The hesitation does not travel. The tear in the eye does not travel. The good intention does not travel.
Only the sentence travels.
And once a sentence travels alone, it becomes dangerous. A sincere concern is reported as an attack. A casual remark is reported as an insult. A difference of opinion is reported as hostility. A question becomes a complaint. A worry becomes a verdict. A private discussion becomes public property.
Then people say:
“Did you hear what he said?” “Did you know what she thinks?” “Apparently they are against us.” “Someone told me what happened in the meeting.”
This is how many fires begin. Not from what was actually said. But from what was carried away.
This is the danger.
A person may leave a gathering carrying another person’s words the way a thief leaves a house carrying jewellery.
Except this jewellery is not gold.
It is trust. It is dignity. It is honour. And sometimes it is the peace of an entire family.
The Dead Brother
Allah did not describe gheebah lightly.
He did not say it is untidy speech. He did not say it is poor communication. He did not say it is a small social habit that needs some improvement.
Allah gave us an image that should disturb the heart.
Would one of you like to eat the flesh of his dead brother?
A dead person cannot defend himself. An absent person cannot explain himself. A dead person cannot say, “That is not what I meant.” An absent person cannot say, “You left out the beginning.” A dead person cannot say, “You changed my tone.” An absent person cannot say, “Why did you not ask me before believing this?”
This is why backbiting is ugly.
It feeds on absence. It becomes strong when the other person is not present. It wears the clothing of truth and says, “But I am only saying what happened.”
The Prophet ﷺ removed this excuse.
He asked the Companions if they knew what backbiting was. Then he said it is to mention your brother in a way he dislikes. When they asked, “What if what I say is true?” he said that if it is true, it is backbiting; and if it is false, it is slander.
This is a sentence that destroys many of our excuses. Because many people think the only sin is lying. So they say:
“But it is true.”
Yes.
And that may be exactly why it is gheebah. Truth is not automatically permission.
A knife may be clean.
It can still wound.
When the Tongues Carried a Rumour
The greatest Qur’anic lesson on rumour is the incident of al-Ifk, the slander against our mother ʿĀ’ishah رضي الله عنها.
A necklace was lost. A caravan moved. A pure woman was left behind without fault. A righteous man helped her. Then the diseased tongues began their work.
The Qur’an says the slander was carried by a group from within the community.
This is painful.
It was not only outside enemies. It was not only strangers. It was people near enough to speak, near enough to listen, near enough to repeat.
The Qur’an describes the disease perfectly:
إِذْ تَلَقَّوْنَهُۥ بِأَلْسِنَتِكُمْ
“You received it with your tongues.”
Not with your minds. Not with your hearts. Not with evidence. With your tongues.
This is such a strange expression.
Usually we receive with our ears. But gossip is different.
The tongue is already ready before the ear has finished hearing. The person is not listening to understand. He is listening to repeat.
The Qur’an says they spoke with their mouths what they had no knowledge of, and they thought it was small, while with Allah it was great.
This is the frightening part.
A thing can be light in a gathering and heavy with Allah. A joke can be heavy. A forwarded message can be heavy. A “between you and me” can be heavy. A “don’t tell anyone I told you” can be heavy. A “I probably shouldn’t say this” can be heavy.
Actually, that last sentence is often the warning bell.
When the tongue says, “I probably shouldn’t say this,” the heart should reply, “Then don’t.”
Zaynab’s Honour
In the story of al-Ifk there is a beautiful moment.
The Prophet ﷺ asked Zaynab bint Jahsh رضي الله عنها about ʿĀ’ishah رضي الله عنها.
Zaynab was not an ordinary person in that situation. She was also a wife of the Prophet ﷺ. She had her own place. Her own dignity. Her own nearness.
Human beings can be weak in such moments.
A rival’s difficulty can become an opportunity. A person may say something carefully poisonous. Nothing direct. Just enough to damage. Just enough to lower the other person. Just enough to say, “Allah knows best,” while making sure everyone understands the hint.
But Zaynab رضي الله عنها did not do this.
She said she knew nothing but good.
ʿĀ’ishah رضي الله عنها later said that Allah protected Zaynab because of her piety.
This is adab.
To protect the honour of someone who could have been seen as a rival. To refuse to benefit from another person’s humiliation. To say good when the nafs could have enjoyed saying less.
This is a high form of character. Not the character we display when we love someone.
The character we display when we could quietly harm someone and nobody would blame us.
The Verse We Forget Before Forwarding
Allah says:
يَـٰٓأَيُّهَا ٱلَّذِينَ ءَامَنُوٓا۟ إِن جَآءَكُمْ فَاسِقٌۢ بِنَبَإٍۢ فَتَبَيَّنُوٓا۟
“O believers, if an evildoer brings you any news, verify it…”
This verse should slow down the thumb.
Before forwarding. Before repeating. Before reacting. Before calling three friends. Before forming an opinion. Before deciding that someone is arrogant, corrupt, jealous, rude, disloyal, ungrateful, or against us.
Verify.
And sometimes verification is not enough.
Sometimes silence is better.
Because not every verified matter is ours to carry.
A person may know something true and still have no right to spread it. A doctor knows true things. A counsellor knows true things. A teacher knows true things. A parent knows true things. A leader knows true things.
Truth without amanah becomes betrayal.
Mockery Is Also a Door
Allah also says in Sūrat al-Ḥujurāt:
Do not let one group ridicule another. Do not let women ridicule other women. Do not defame one another. Do not call each other by offensive nicknames.
This is important because gheebah does not always begin as a serious accusation.
Sometimes it begins as humour.
A nickname. A little imitation. A small comment about someone’s body. A private joke about someone’s voice. A family joke about the daughter-in-law. A staffroom joke about the parent. A classroom joke about the child. A community joke about the convert. A religious joke about the person who is trying to change.
And everyone laughs.
Except the angels.
There is a hadith about our mother ʿĀ’ishah رضي الله عنها. She made a comment about Ṣafiyyah رضي الله عنها that indicated she was short. The Prophet ﷺ told her that she had said a word which, if mixed with the sea, would affect it.
The sea.
A small word. A vast sea.
This is how the Messenger ﷺ taught the weight of speech.
We count words by size.
Allah counts them by truth, justice, mercy, and harm.
Musa Was Slandered
The Qur’an tells the believers not to be like those who hurt Musa عليه السلام.
Bani Israel said things about him. They made claims. They attached shame to a prophet whose modesty was part of his beauty.
Allah cleared him.
This is important.
Sometimes Allah clears the innocent in this world. Sometimes He delays it. Sometimes the person dies and the truth appears later. Sometimes the truth appears only on the Day of Judgment.
But no slander disappears.
Words do not die because the conversation ended.
They remain somewhere.
They wait for their owner.
Maryam and the Cruelty of Appearances
Maryam عليها السلام returned to her people carrying ʿĪsā عليه السلام.
The people saw something. They understood nothing.
But they spoke.
They judged by appearance. They used family language against her.
“Your father was not an evil man. Your mother was not unchaste.”
This is how people often make accusation sound religious.
They do not say, “We are cruel.” They say, “We care about family honour.” They say, “We care about standards.” They say, “We care about the community.”
But Maryam was pure.
And Allah made the infant speak. The baby defended the mother when the adults had lost their adab. This story should make us afraid of judging too quickly.
Especially when we see only one scene.
A person crying in a corridor. A child angry in class. A parent upset in the office. A teacher tired in a meeting. A spouse silent at a gathering. A young person distant from the masjid.
We see one scene and write a whole book. We should fear Allah.
We do not know the hidden chapter.
Yusuf and the Dignity of Restraint
Yusuf عليه السلام heard his brothers say that if Binyamin had stolen, then his brother had stolen before.
They meant Yusuf. They were speaking about him while he was standing there. They did not know who he was.
The Qur’an says Yusuf kept it within himself and did not reveal it to them. There is a lesson here.
Not every false word deserves an immediate reply. Not every insult needs to become a debate. Not every accusation must be answered in the same room.
Sometimes dignity is silence. Not the silence of weakness. The silence of a heart that knows Allah knows.
This is difficult.
Because the nafs wants to correct every sentence. The nafs wants the last word. The nafs wants the room to know that we are innocent, intelligent, right, misunderstood, and morally superior.
Yusuf teaches another path.
Hold yourself.
Allah is not absent.
The Two Graves
The Prophet ﷺ once passed by two graves. He said the two people were being punished. One did not protect himself from urine. The other used to walk about with namīmah, carrying tales between people.
This should terrify anyone who treats gossip as a social skill.
Namīmah is not ordinary speech. It is speech that carries poison from one heart to another.
A person says: “I am only telling you because you should know.”
But why should they know?
Will it help them repair? Will it prevent harm? Will it return a right? Will it bring two hearts closer?
Or will it only make one person dislike another?
There are people who become bridges for Shayṭān. They carry sparks from room to room.
Then they act surprised when houses burn.
Copper Nails
During the Miʿrāj, the Prophet ﷺ saw people scratching their faces and chests with copper nails. Jibrīl عليه السلام explained that these were people who ate the flesh of others and attacked people’s honour.
Again the image returns.
Flesh. Honour. The body being torn because the tongue tore others.
This is not a small matter.
It is not a personality trait. It is not “how I vent.” It is not “how we process.” It is a sin that can become a punishment.
The tongue laughs now.
The face may cry later.
Muʿādh and the Tongue
Muʿādh ibn Jabal رضي الله عنه asked the Prophet ﷺ about a deed that would admit him into Paradise and keep him away from the Fire. The Prophet ﷺ taught him the pillars, the doors of good, the head of the matter, its pillar, and its peak. Then he took hold of his tongue and said:
Restrain this. Muʿādh was surprised.
Will we be taken to account for what we say?
The Prophet ﷺ gave the answer that should make every gathering quiet: Are people thrown into the Fire except because of what their tongues harvest?
The tongue plants. The tongue harvests. Some people plant mercy. Some plant suspicion. Some plant reconciliation. Some plant humiliation. Some plant courage. Some plant resentment.
Every day the tongue is farming the Hereafter.
The Bankrupt Person
The Prophet ﷺ asked the Companions who the bankrupt person was. They thought of money. He taught them to think of deeds.
A person may come on the Day of Judgment with prayer, fasting, and zakah.
But he insulted this one. Slandered that one. Took the wealth of this one. Shed the blood of that one. Struck another.
So his good deeds are given away.
When his good deeds finish, the sins of those he wronged are placed on him.
This hadith should be remembered before every gossip session.
When I backbite someone, I may be giving him my prayer. When I humiliate someone, I may be giving her my fasting. When I spread a rumour, I may be handing over my Qur’an recitation.
This is a terrible trade.
I speak for five minutes. And pay from years of worship.
Hasan al-Basri رحمه الله understood this. When he heard that someone had backbitten him, it is reported that he sent the person a plate of sweet dates. He said, in meaning: I heard you gifted me your good deeds, so I wanted to repay you.
This is a darkly funny story.
But it is funny in the way a graveyard can be funny.
The backbiter thinks he is taking.
Actually he is giving.
Ibn al-Mubarak رحمه الله is reported to have said that if he were to backbite anyone, he would backbite his parents, because they would be most deserving of his good deeds.
That sentence should stop us.
If my words are going to transfer my reward to someone, then what am I doing handing it to people I dislike?
The Debt of Honour
The Prophet ﷺ said that whoever has wronged another person concerning his honour or anything else should seek forgiveness before the Day when there will be no dinar and no dirham.
This means honour is a debt. Reputation is a debt. Dignity is a debt.
A careless sentence can become a debt. A private message can become a debt. A meeting betrayed can become a debt.
A teacher spoken about unjustly. A parent mocked. A child labelled. A spouse exposed. A colleague reduced to one mistake. A leader slandered. A worker humiliated.
All of these may come back as claims.
People worry about unpaid bills.
We should also worry about unpaid words.
The Tale-Bearer
The Prophet ﷺ said the tale-bearer will not enter Paradise.
This is a severe warning.
A tale-bearer is not only someone who lies. He may tell the truth. But he tells it with corruption. He moves words from one person to another in a way that breaks hearts.
He says:
“Do you know what she said about you?” “Do you know what they are planning?” “I was in the room, and honestly, I think you should be careful.”
Sometimes there is a valid warning.
Islam is not asking us to hide abuse, corruption, danger, or injustice.
But many warnings are not warnings.
They are entertainment wearing the clothes of concern.
A true warning is careful. A true warning is necessary. A true warning goes to the person who can help. A true warning carries only what is needed. A false warning enjoys the damage.
Speak Good or Be Silent
The Prophet ﷺ gave us a simple door:
Whoever believes in Allah and the Last Day should speak good or remain silent.
This is not poverty of expression. This is wealth of restraint.
Silence is not always emptiness. Sometimes silence is worship. Sometimes silence is mercy. Sometimes silence is the only honest thing left after the nafs has prepared a speech.
A Muslim is one from whose tongue and hand other Muslims are safe.
Safe.
What a beautiful word.
Are people safe from my tongue? Is my home safe from my tongue? Is my spouse safe? Are my children safe? Are my colleagues safe? Are absent people safe? Are people safe when I am angry? Are they safe when I am funny? Are they safe when I am hurt? Are they safe when I have information?
A person may pray much and still be unsafe to sit with.
This is a tragedy.
Defend the Absent
The Prophet ﷺ said that whoever defends his brother’s honour in his absence, Allah will protect his face from the Fire on the Day of Resurrection.
So the listener has a role. The sin is not only on the speaker.
A gathering becomes corrupt when everyone gives permission by silence.
Sometimes all it takes is one sentence.
“Let us not speak about him while he is not here.” “Maybe there is another side.” “We should ask her directly.” “This is not ours to discuss.” “May Allah protect us. Let us change the subject.”
These sentences are not small.
They are shields.
And perhaps on the Day of Judgment, when our faces need protection, Allah will remember that we once protected the face of someone absent.
Concealment
The Prophet ﷺ said that whoever conceals the faults of a Muslim, Allah will conceal his faults in this world and the Hereafter.
This does not mean hiding harm. It does not mean covering abuse. It does not mean protecting a wrongdoer from justice.
But it does mean we are not hunters of faults.
Some people search for mistakes with appetite.
They collect people’s weak moments. They store screenshots. They remember slips. They keep old stories ready. Then, when anger comes, they open the cupboard. This is not righteousness.
This is a disease.
The Prophet ﷺ warned us not to search for people’s faults. He warned that if someone searches for the faults of Muslims, Allah may expose him even in his own house.
A society of fault-hunters is a frightening society.
Everyone becomes afraid.
No one can grow. No one can repent quietly. No one can make a mistake and return to Allah without becoming a story.
Umar and the Window
There is a report about ʿUmar ibn al-Khaṭṭāb رضي الله عنه.
He came across a gathering where people were doing wrong. But he was reminded that Allah forbids spying. So he left them.
This story needs care. It is not a permission slip for sin.
ʿUmar was not soft on wrongdoing.
But it teaches a different matter.
Even when correcting wrong, we are not allowed to become people of spying, exposure, and secret appetite.
Some people enjoy catching others.
They call it justice. But the heart knows when justice has become hunger.
Allah says:
وَلَا تَجَسَّسُوا
Do not spy.
A community cannot be built on suspicion. A school cannot be built on suspicion. A family cannot be built on suspicion. An institution cannot be built on suspicion. Trust does not mean blindness.
But suspicion is not wisdom.
Do Not Narrate Everything
The Prophet ﷺ said it is enough of a lie for a person to narrate everything he hears.
This hadith is for our age.
Because we hear too much. We receive too much. We forward too quickly.
A person can become a liar without inventing a single sentence.
How?
By repeating everything. Because everything we hear is not accurate. And everything accurate is not complete. And everything complete is not beneficial. And everything beneficial is not ours to share.
This is the order we forget.
True? Complete? Needed? Kind? Mine to say?
If the answer fails at any door, the tongue should wait.
Repairing Between People
The Prophet ﷺ taught that putting things right between people is higher in degree than optional fasting, prayer, and charity, and that spoiling relationships is destructive.
This is beautiful.
Because the tongue has two futures.
It can become a knife. Or it can become a needle.
A knife cuts. A needle stitches.
Some people use words to open wounds. Some people use words to close them.
A family needs stitchers. A school needs stitchers. A community needs stitchers. A workplace needs stitchers.
Not people who deny problems. Not people who pretend everything is fine. But people who carry words with amanah.
People who say, “Let us bring them together.” People who say, “Let us understand before reacting.” People who say, “Let us not make this worse.” People who say, “I will not be the road by which Shayṭān travels.”
In a Family
Many family disputes begin after the gathering.
A mother says something in worry. A daughter-in-law hears it as rejection. A brother reports it with spice. A sister adds history. An uncle gives judgement. A cousin forwards a voice note.
Now the original sentence has become a creature with teeth.
Nobody remembers the tone. Nobody remembers the worry. Nobody remembers that the first speaker was tired, clumsy, but not malicious. Now there are camps.
One careless narration can divide a family for years.
The Prophet ﷺ came to build kinship.
Our tongues should not cut what he came to join.
In a School
This belongs in education too.
A school is full of gatherings.
Teacher meetings. Parent meetings. Child study meetings. Leadership meetings. Conflict meetings. Pastoral meetings.
Meetings where a child’s struggle is discussed. Meetings where a family’s pain is mentioned. Meetings where a teacher’s weakness is named. Meetings where a mistake is being repaired.
These gatherings are an amanah.
A child is not a topic. A parent is not a topic. A teacher is not a topic. A child’s difficulty should not become staffroom flavour. A parent’s weakness should not become corridor talk. A teacher’s mistake should not become a story passed around with raised eyebrows.
In a school, words shape destiny.
A label can follow a child. A careless comment can harden a teacher’s heart. A private family matter can become a public shadow. If we want children of character, the adults must first become people whose tongues have character. A school with beautiful walls and unsafe speech is not a safe school. A school with simple walls and protected honour has light.
In a Community
A community often does not die from one big enemy. It dies from many small tongues.
A little suspicion. A little mockery. A little forwarding. A little “I heard.” A little “Be careful of them.” A little “I am only telling you privately.”
Then the hearts move apart.
Rows remain straight in prayer. But hearts stand far away from one another.
This is one of the saddest sights. Bodies shoulder to shoulder. Hearts full of stories.
We ask Allah for unity, while feeding the sentences that destroy unity.
The Way Back
So what do we do?
First, we treat gatherings as a trust. If something is said in a meeting, it does not automatically belong outside the meeting.
Second, if something must be conveyed, we carry it with context. Not with drama. Not with our emotional seasoning. Not with missing beginnings and sharpened endings.
Third, we refuse to be customers of gossip. Every market exists because there are buyers. If nobody bought gossip, fewer people would sell it.
Fourth, we defend the absent. Even one sentence can change the air.
Fifth, we repent. Some of us have spoken too much. Some of us have carried words. Some of us have harmed people who still do not know we harmed them. Some of us have eaten the flesh of our dead brother while speaking in the language of concern.
So we ask Allah to forgive us. And where needed, we repair.
Not with public performance. With sincerity. With duʿā. With apology. With better speech. With silence.
With becoming safe.
Closing Reflection
Perhaps the question is not only: Do I backbite?
Perhaps the deeper question is: Do people become safer after speaking to me?
When someone trusts me with pain, does the pain remain protected? When I leave a meeting, do I leave with amanah or with material? When I hear a rumour, do I become its grave or its wings? When someone is absent, is their honour safe in my mouth?
The tongue is small. But it can break a home.
It can divide a community. It can darken a school. It can bankrupt a worshipper. It can carry a person toward the Fire.
And the same tongue can do something else. It can defend the absent. It can reconcile hearts. It can conceal faults. It can verify. It can say, “This is not for us to discuss.” It can make duʿā. It can speak good. It can remain silent.
Ya Allah, make our gatherings gatherings of amanah. Make our tongues clean. Make our homes safe from gossip. Make our schools safe from labels. Make our communities safe from suspicion.
Do not let us eat the flesh of those who trusted us. Do not let us carry words without their soul. Do not let us betray tone, context, intention, or dignity.
Make us people whose silence is worship. Whose speech is mercy. Whose presence protects honour. And whose gatherings are safe because the hearts in them remember You.
Āmīn.
Source note
The wording “al-majālisu bil-amānah” is reported in Sunan Abi Dawud 4869, where the English rendering is “Meetings are confidential…”; Sunnah.com also records al-Albani’s grading as weak, so I have phrased it as “it is reported” while leaning on stronger Qur’anic and hadith foundations for the meaning.
The Qur’anic foundations used here include Sūrat al-Ḥujurāt 49:12 on suspicion, spying, and backbiting; Sūrat an-Nūr 24:11–20 on al-Ifk; 24:15–16 on carrying speech without knowledge; 49:6 on verification; 49:11 on mockery and hurtful names; 17:36 on not following what one has no knowledge of; 50:18 on every word being recorded; 104:1 on backbiters and slanderers; 68:11 on the gossip-monger; 33:69 on the slander against Musa; 12:77 on Yusuf restraining himself; and 19:27–30 on Maryam being accused and defended by Allah.
The hadith foundations used include the Prophet’s ﷺ definition of backbiting, Zaynab bint Jahsh’s restraint during al-Ifk, ʿĀ’ishah’s comment about Ṣafiyyah, the two graves, the Miʿrāj vision of copper nails, Muʿādh and the tongue, the bankrupt person, seeking forgiveness for wronging another’s honour, the warning about the tale-bearer, speaking good or remaining silent, safety from the tongue, defending the absent, concealing faults, avoiding suspicion and spying, not narrating everything one hears, and reconciling between people.
The hikayat-style reports used include Hasan al-Basri sending dates to the one who backbit him, the saying attributed to Ibn al-Mubarak about giving away good deeds through backbiting, and the report of ʿUmar leaving a gathering after being reminded not to spy.