the ugliness of your Hinder parts. When ye therefore mention Allah, be abstemious and stand upright, for, verily, froth is on the surface of what is pure.'"[1] "'Commander of the Believers'", replied Ṭulaiḥah, "this is one of the corruptions of unbelief which has altogether been destroyed by Islâm. I am not, therefore, to be scolded for holding a part of it." ʿUmar remained silent.
Khâlid in Rammân and Abânain. Khâlid ibn-al-Walîd came to Rammân[2] and Abânain[3] where the remnant of the army of Buzâkhah stood. They refrained from fighting against him and swore allegiance before him to abu-Bakr.
Banu-ʿÂmir ibn-Ṣaʿṣaʿah embrace Islâm. Khâlid ibn-al-Walîd sent Hishâm ibn-al-ʿÂṣi ibn-Wâʾil as-Sahmi., a brother of ʿAmr ibn-al-ʿÂṣi, one of the early Moslems and one of the Emigrants to Abyssinia, to the banu-ʿÂmir ibn Ṣaʿṣaʿah. Banu-ʿÂmir did not resist him and professed Islâm and practised the call to prayer. So he left them.
Ḳurrah's life spared. Ḳurrah ibn-Hubairah-l-Ḳushairi, having refused to pay ṣadaḳah and reinforced Ṭulaiḥah, was taken by Hishâm ibn-al-ʿÂṣi to Khâlid. The latter carried him to abu-Bakr to whom Ḳurrah said, "By Allah I never forsook my faith since I became a believer. As ʿAmr ibn-al-ʿÂṣi on his way back from ʿUmaân passed by me, I treated him hospitably and was loyal to him." ʿAmr was questioned by abu-Bakr regarding that, and he corroborated the statement. Consequently, abu-Bakr spared Ḳurrah's life.
Others assert that Khâlid advanced to the land of the banu-ʿÂmir, took Ḳurrah captive and sent him to abu-Bakr.
The battle of al-Ghamr. Then Khâlid ibn-al-Walîd ad-