Compare isnād
6 chains merged
Common narrators appear once. Edge weights show how many input chains share that transmission step.
Hadiths in comparison
- Sahih al-Bukhari · 1031sahih
The Prophet (ﷺ) never raised his hands for any invocation except for that of Istisqa' and he used to raise them so much that the whiteness of his armpits became visible. (Note: It may be that Anas did not see the Prophet (ﷺ) raising his han
- Sahih al-Bukhari · 3565sahih
Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) did not use to raise his hands in his invocations except in the Istisqa (i.e. invoking Allah for the rain) in which he used to raise his hands so high that one could see the whiteness of his armpits. (Note: It may be
- Sahih Muslim · 895 csahih
Anas reported that the Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) was not accustomed to raice his hands in any supplication he made except when praying for rain. (He would then raise [his hands] high enough) that the whiteness of his armpits became visible. 'A
- Sunan Abi Dawud · 1170sahih
The Prophet (ﷺ) was not accustomed to raise his hands in any supplication he made except when praying for rain. He would then raise them high enough so much so that the whiteness of his armpits was visible.
- Sunan an-Nasa'i · 1513sahih
"The Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) did not raise his hands during any supplication except when praying for rain, when he used to raise his hands so high that the whiteness of his armpits could be seen."
- Sunan Ibn Majah · 1180sahih
It was narrated from Anas bin Malik that the Prophet (ﷺ) did not raise his hands in any of his supplications except when praying for rain (Istisqa’), when he raised his hands so high that the whiteness of his armpits could be seen.
Merged isnād DAG
Top: Prophet ﷺ. Each row is one transmission generation. Cards show narrator metadata; the badge shows how many of the compared hadiths pass through that narrator.
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Prophet Muhammad (ﷺ)
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