Compare isnād
4 chains merged
Common narrators appear once. Edge weights show how many input chains share that transmission step.
Hadiths in comparison
- Sahih Muslim · 564 asahih
The Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) forbade eating of onions and leek. When we were overpowered by a desire (to eat) we ate them. Upon this he (the Prophet) said: He who eats of this offensive plant must not approach our mosque, for the angels are h
- Sunan an-Nasa'i · 707sahih
"The Messenger of Allah (ﷺ) said: 'Whoever eats of this plant' - the first time he said 'garlic' then he said, 'garlic, onions and leeks' [1] - 'let him not approach us in our Masjids, for the angels are offended by that which offends manki
- Mishkat al-Masabih · 707
Jabir reported God’s Messenger as saying, “If anyone eats of this offensive tree* he must not approach our mosque, for the angels are harmed by the same things as men.” * Bukhari <i>At’ima</i>, 49, shows the Prophet’s objection to onions an
- Mishkat al-Masabih · 4197
Jabir reported the Prophet (ﷺ) as saying, “He who eats garlic or onions must keep away from us.” Or he said, “must keep away from our mosque,” or, “must sit in his house.” A pot containing green vegetables was brought to the Prophet, but on
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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